Apicoltura e Meditazione
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Apicoltura e Meditazione
Few countries love honey and revere beekeepers more than Greece, and perhaps no country has a deeper history in this craft. According to mythology, Greece’s first keeper of bees was the demigod Aristaeus, who was said to have learned beekeeping as a child from the Nymphs who raised him and to later pass his knowledge to humans. He “invented the riddled hive… and made a settled place for the labors of the wandering bees,” wrote the poet Nonnus in his epic fifth century poem, “Dionysiaca.” Nonnus also credited Aristaeus with developing the first bee-suit, and to have been reared on nectar and ambrosia, the honey-based foods of the Gods.
Mythology aside, beekeeping may have come to Greece as early as 1500 BCE, when laws promulgated by the Hittites outlined the punishment for theft of a hive (five shekels of silver, about the same as for stealing a sheep). In Athens, archaeologists have excavated cylindrical hives, made from pottery dating to 400 BCE, which often were reused as coffins for children.
70 percent of the world’s agriculture depends on bees, yet we’ve managed to let this insect’s population decline so dramatically that bees are now considered an endangered species.
Today, the average Greek consumes approximately 3.6 pounds of honey a year, the largest amount per capita in the European Union and more than double U.S. consumption. According to a 2013 study, Greece has the greatest density of bee colonies in Europe, with 11.4 colonies per square kilometer. (The U.S., by comparison, averages only one colony in twice that amount of land.) The country also produces some of the finest honey in the world. At the 2019 London Honey Awards, judges bestowed prizes on 17 Greek honey producers, crowning them with three of five possible platinum awards.
While bee colonies in the U.S. have been famously dying at a catastrophic rate for at least 10 years, dragging down American honey production, Greece’s honey industry has remained stable, producing honey that is widey praised. Indeed, Greek scientists have found that bee colonies on Mount Olympus, mythical home of the twelve Greek Gods, produce several varieties of honey that are among the most potent in the world, containing antibacterial, antioxidant, and anti-cancer properties.
Today, with the Greek economy still reeling from its years-long debt crisis, and unemployment hovering dangerously around 18 percent, beekeeping is still flourishing—an economic refuge for some, and a growing cottage industry.
I’ve come to Greece to understand why this country has so many prospering bees and beekeepers, and why theirs is so widely ranked as some of the most flavorful, potent, and healthful honey in the world. I also want to learn why Greece has largely avoided the catastrophic die-off of honeybees that has afflicted so many other countries—and what lessons Greek practices might yield for those countries. My questions went well beyond gastronomic concerns. In July, 2019, the Earthwatch Institute declared the honeybee “the most important living being on earth.” The reason: 70 percent of the world’s agriculture depends on bees, yet we’ve managed to let this insect’s population decline so dramatically that bees are now considered an endangered species.
My efforts to answer these questions took me all over Greece, from the craggy, southwestern reaches of the Peloponnese peninsula in southern Greece, to Karditsa, a small, bicycle-friendly city in the center of the country, and finally to Amorgos, a narrow island shaped like a comma in the Aegean Sea.
#art #artistsoninstagram #ink #inkordie #inkinkink #monsters #theinkmonster #ornate #insect #bee #honeybee #tattoo #honey #callmehoney #honey #beekeping #takingabreak (at Bucharest)
And once again Farm School surprised me with another awesome opportunity: Learning about bees. https://makingfood.blog/2026/04/24/bees-bees-bees/
Shit climate to care for the bees today, kind of messed up our whole schedule and tomorrow we won't be able to do it before we leave :/
Hives in good condition are a pleasure to use, look good, have a higher resale value, they also ultimately save some of that valuable commodity - beekeeper man hours !
I hear some say "the bees do not care whether their hives are good, bad or indifferent", but properly treated hives are easier for the beekeeper to manipulate. This means less disruptions to the bees and I believe this can have a noticeable effect (lack of stress... better wellbeing... more productive).
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Website : https://wikibeekeeping.org
Beekeping Suits: What You Need for Safe Beekeeping
Beekeping Suits: What You Need for Safe Beekeeping
Buying a Beekeping Suit When you decide to take up beekeeping as a hobby is essential to beekeping, as bees have a first line of defense, which is to sting. Even though beekeepers are equipped with the knowledge on bee behaviors, they still need to wear protective clothing. Being stung by bees can be fatal to those allergic to them. Many people are allergic are but some people do not find out…
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