No Day Off

Feb 15, 2010

It's Presidents' Day today, a holiday for most of us but not for the honey bees.

The bees are buzzing in and around the almond blossoms, collecting nectar and pollen for their hives. Nectar provides the carbohydrates for the hive, and pollen provides the proteins. 

Someone told me yesterday that she thought that the drones (males) gather the nectar and pollen. Not so. (Shades of the inaccurate information released in Jerry Seinfeld's "The Bee Movie" and the equally inaccurate term, "pollen jocks.") No, the only function of the drones is reproduction. When the virgin queen bee heads out on her maiden flight, she'll mate with 12 to 25 drones or so in the drone congregation area. Then the drones die. Happy, probably. If they don't mate, they'll die within a month. Sad, probably.

The queen bee, in peak season, will lay about 2000 eggs a day. The worker bees--all sterile female workers--serve as  the nurse maids, nannies, royal attendants, builders, architects, foragers, dancers, honey tenders, pollen packers, propolis or "glue" specialists, air conditioning and heating technicians, guards, and undertakers.

It's a matriarchal society.

So when you see the bees buzzing around the almond blossoms, they're girls. Busy girls. Golden girls. They not only buzz, they rock.

They're the ones that pollinate one-third of the food we eat, including California's 700,000 acres of almonds.

You go, girls!


By Kathy Keatley Garvey
Author - Communications specialist

Attached Images:

HONEY BEE visiting an almond blossom. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)

Honey Bee

FINE GRAINS of pollen look like gold dust on the honey bee. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)

Pollen Dust

POLLEN LOAD on a honey bee resembles a beach ball. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)

Beach Ball

GOODBYE, BEE--A honey bee leaves the almond blossoms and heads back to her hive. All the worker bees are girls.  (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)

Wild Blue Yonder