
Originally Posted by
Specialkayme
You will not get ANY type of varietal honey, that you can label as such, from one acre of land. It doesn't matter what you plant there. Varietal honeys involve placing hives in areas surrounded by a particular plant, then timing when you put supers on and when you take them off, to coincide with the flow of that plant. That will not be possible from a one acre plot. If a bee will fly up to 3 miles away to forage, and there are 640 (roughly) acres in a square mile, that means your bees are covering roughly 18,000 acres of land. If you plant one acre for them, and there is ANYTHING else in bloom during that time period, you are ensuring that roughly 1/18,000 of your honey came from your acre. The only varietal honey you can get in this area is usually Tulip Poplar, sometimes Sourwood, and maybe blackberry.
But, beneficial plantings do have other purposes. While buckwheat won't yield you enough to call it a honey crop, it does have the opportunity to bloom during our summer dearth, if planted correctly. The month of July, in central NC, does not have any flowering plants that bees can use for nectar. Usually clover will last until mid to late June, and July is too hot for anything else to take hold. Buckwheat can bloom during that time period, if you plant it correctly, giving your bees something to forage on rather than fight each other and rob.
As far as goldenrod goes, I'm not really a fan of it for fall flows. The stuff stinks, is very hit or miss, and is known to crystallize easily. I know others have relied on it as their fall flow to overwinter colonies. But I've made the error of relying on it some years, only to have zero stores appear and have to feed quickly before too late. But, even if you did plant it, I think it takes a few seasons for it to really get established. Maybe I'm remembering incorrectly.
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