Information On Hive Products & Honey
| Bee Facts: * It takes nectar from about 2 million flowers to make one pound of honey * A worker bee (female bee) makes only about 1/12 teaspoon of honey in her lifetime, which is about 4 to 6 weeks during summer * Bees have 5 eyes * They fly about 20 mph * Bees have 2 sets of wings * Bees emit chemicals called pheromones to communicate * A bee dies after losing its stinger in you, stinging only in defense of herself or her home * Drones, or male bees, do not have stingers * The Queen bee lays one to two thousand eggs a day, and lives for up to 5 years * Bees are attracted to dark colors * Each hive is home to up to 60,000 bees * North Carolina's bee population is about 50 million, and contributes approximately $185 Million to the agricultural industry through pollination each year. |
Raw Honey which has not been pasteurized or filtered, and ideally taken directly from the hive is a treasure chest of nutritional value and medicinal remedies. It contains an abundance of vitamins and minerals and is a natural and powerful medicine, both internally and externally.
Raw honey may become granulated, as
some does after only a few weeks and another maybe after several years. Honey varieties with a high glucose to water ratio will granulate faster than varieties having lower glucose/higher fructose content. If the
granulations bother you, simply place the honey into a pan of hot water (no more than 100 degrees) and let it stand until becoming liquid again.
The list of honey's beneficial functions is a long one. Honey increases calcium absorption; can increase hemoglobin count and treat or prevent anemia caused by nutritional factors; can help arthritic joints when combined with apple cider vinegar or honey vinegar; fights colds and respiratory infections of all kinds; can help to boost gastrointestinal ulcer healing; works as a natural and gentle laxative; aids constipation, allergies and obesity; provides an array of vitamins and minerals; and supplies instant energy without the insulin surge caused by white sugar.
Many have found raw honey helpful for its positive effects
against allergies and hay fever, and a tablespoonful at night can help
with insomnia. As an antiseptic, honey is also a drawing agent for
poisons from bites or stings or infected wounds, and has outperformed
antibiotics in treatments for stomach ulcerations, gangrene, surgical
wound infections, surgical incisions and the protection of skin
grafts, corneas, blood vessels and bones during storage and
shipment.
Raw honey is exceptionally effective internally against
bacteria and parasites, plus it contains natural antibiotics which
help kill microbes directly. Raw honey, when applied topically, speeds the
healing of tissues damaged by infection and/or trauma. It contains
vitamins, minerals and enzymes, as well as sugars, all of which aid in the
healing of
wounds.
In recent years, honey has been
used effectively in clinical settings for the treatment of fist-sized ulcers
extending to the bone, as well as for first, second and third-degree burns.
Complete healing has been reported without the need for skin grafts and with
no infection or muscle loss. It can be applied full strength to such
conditions, covered with a sterile bandage, and changed daily. When the
wounds are clean, honey acts
as a healer. This also is the same procedure for
infected wounds, ulcerations and impetigo. Garlic honey can also be applied
directly to infected wounds, which will help clean up the area of
infection.
Honey has effective antibacterial and anti-inflammatory
properties. Astonishingly, it painlessly removes pus, scabs and dead tissue
from wounds and stimulates new tissue growth. Randomized trials have
shown that honey is more effective in controlling infection in burn wounds
than silver sulfadiazine, the antibacterial ointment most widely used on
burns in hospitals.
The
therapeutic potential of honey is grossly underutilized. With increasing
interest in the use of alternative therapies and as the development of
antibiotic-resistant bacteria spreads, honey may finally receive its due
recognition as a wound healer.
Raw honey makes a
sterile, painless and effective wound dressing. Apply it directly to open
cuts, abrasions and burns, and cover it with a piece of gauze. The results
will occur quicker than with conventional alternatives, such as salves and
creams.
Honey is also exceptionally effective for respiratory ailments.
One Bulgarian study of almost 18,000 patients found that it improved
chronic bronchitis, asthmatic bronchitis, chronic and allergic rhinitis
and sinusitis. It's an effective treatment for colds, flu,
respiratory infections and a generally depressed immune system. Whereas sugar
shuts down the immune system, a good quality honey will stimulate it
into action.
Here are some more ways to utilize the healing power of
honey:
BURNS - Apply freely over burns. It cools, removes pain and aids
fast healing without scarring. Apart from being a salve and an
antibiotic, bacteria simply cannot survive in honey.
BED WETTING - A
teaspoon of honey before bed aids water retention and calms fears in
children.
INSOMNIA - A tablespoon of honey aids
sleep and works wonders. Your body repairs muscle tissue and other stuff while you sleep, it needs energy to do so and looks first in your liver for what it needs, if nothing is there, it robs what it needs from other parts of the body, causing restlessness. Consumed honey right before bed goes straight to your liver, so the body has what it needs and you sleep better!
GUM DISEASE/RECEDING GUMLINES - honey will help heal gum desease while you sleep if you take it AFTER brushing teeth before bed (it will NOT cause tooth decay since it has antibacterial qualities that kill germs causing tooth decay).
HYPERACTIVITY - Replace all use of white
sugar with honey. White sugar is highly stimulating with no food qualities.
Honey provides the energy without the "spike."
NASAL CONGESTION -
Place a dessert spoon of honey in a basin of water and inhale fumes after
covering your head with a towel over the basin.
Very effective!
FATIGUE - Dissolve a dessert spoon of honey in warm
water or mix in a jar or jug 1/4 honey and 3/4 water and keep in the fridge.
Honey is primarily fructose and glucose, so it's quickly absorbed by the
digestive system. Honey is a unique natural stabilizer: Ancient Greek
athletes took honey for stamina before competing and as a reviver after
competition.
FACIAL DEEP CLEANSER - Mix honey with an
equal quantity of oatmeal, and apply as a face pack. Leave on for half an
hour, then wash it off. Great as a deep cleanser for acne and other unwanted
blemishes.
POOR DIGESTION - Mix honey with an equal quantity of apple
cider vinegar or honey vinegar and dilute to taste with water. This is also wonderful for the
joints and promotes weight loss.
HAIR CONDITIONER - Mix honey with
an equal quantity of olive oil, cover head with a warm towel for half an hour
then shampoo off. Feeds hair and scalp. Your hair will never look or feel
better!
SORE THROATS - Let a teaspoon of honey melt in the back of the
mouth and trickle down the throat. Eases inflamed raw tissues.
FOR
STRESS - Honey in water is a stabilizer, calming highs and raising lows. Use
approximately 25 percent honey to water.
ANEMIA - Honey is the best blood
enricher by raising corpuscle content. The darker the honey, the more
minerals it contains.
FOOD PRESERVATIVE - If you replace the sugar in
cake and cookie recipes with honey, they'll stay fresher longer due to
honey's natural antibacterial properties. Reduce liquids in the mixture by
about one-fifth to allow for the moisture present in the in
honey.
BABY'S BOTTLE - Four teaspoons of honey to a baby's bottle of
water is an excellent pacifier and multivitamin additive. If the baby's
movements are too liquid, then reduce the honey by half a teaspoon; if too
solid increase by half a teaspoon. (Caution: Don't give raw honey to
babies under 1 year old; it's just too rich, and infant immune systems may not be developed enough to handle impurities.) For teething, honey rubbed on
a baby's gums is also a mild sedative and anesthetic.
OSTEOPOROSIS -
Research has shown that a teaspoon of honey per day aids calcium utilization
and prevents osteoporosis - probably not a bad idea for anyone over 50.
LONGEVITY - The most long-lived people in the world are all
regular users of honey. An interesting fact, yet to be explained, is that
beekeepers suffer less from cancer and arthritis than any other occupational
group worldwide.
MIGRAINE - Use a dessert spoon of honey dissolved in
half a glass of warm water. Sip at the start of a migraine attack, and, if
necessary, repeat after another 20 minutes.
CONJUNCTIVITIS - Dissolve
honey in an equal quantity of warm water. When cooled, apply as a lotion or
eye bath.
COUGH MIXTURE - Combine 6 ounces (170 grams) liquid honey, 2
ounces (55 grams) glycerin and the juice of two lemons. Mix well. Bottle and
cork firmly, and use as required.
BEESWAX
Candles: Pure beeswax candles, when burned, help to purify the air. What is an air purifier
and what is negative ionization? Negative ions help
freshen and purify the air by causing allergens such as pollen, mold
spores and dust floating in the air (which have either a neutral or a
positive charge) to be attracted to and stick to each other, forming
“clumps (because opposite charges attract). These clumps of particles
then become heavy enough so that gravity can pull them down to the
floor, where they can be vacuumed up, rather than staying in suspension
where they can be breathed in and cause allergic reactions. If you
cannot procure a natural negative ionizer such as a waterfall, burning
a beeswax candle is a simple and effective way of purifying the air
that you breathe. Check it out. The dustier your home the more black
debris will be deposited in the wax around the candle wick.
Over time you may notice a white powdery dust on a beeswax candle, usually when the wax is cold and exposed to air. This is called bloom and is caused by the softer oils in the wax coming to the surface. Bloom is a good indication that your beeswax is pure. It is not harmful and may be removed by buffing the candle with a nylon stocking although this does not work well with hand rolled candles."
Get crafty:
In addition to Candle making, use beeswax for mold making, batik art, lubricating zippers (particularly for sub-aqua clothing), and mouth pieces for Didjeridoos...
10 more uses for beeswax:
1. Unstick a drawer or window. A thin coat of beeswax on wooden rails makes the wood drawers slide smoothly.
2. Free frozen nuts. Help loosen a rusted nut by lubricating the bolt's threads with melted wax.
3. Wax wood. For structural elements that need to look good but take no wear (such as exposed ceiling beams), heat equal parts beeswax, linseed oil, and turpentine. Apply with a burlap rag while the mixture is still warm.
4. Preserve bronze. To ward against oxidation caused by moist air, brush on a solution of 1/3 pound beeswax melted in 1 quart turpentine. Buff it with a towel to create a thin, hard coat.
5. "Whip" frayed rope. Wrap a waxed length of string tightly around the rope's tip about a dozen times. Tie off the loose end and trim the excess.
6. Lube screws. Georgia Beekeepers' Association president Robert Brewer rubs wax over the threads of screws to make them drive smoothly and resist corrosion.
7. Condition a wood cutting board. Add a half-teaspoon beeswax to a cup of mineral oil, microwave until the wax melts, and apply the mixture to the board with a soft cloth.
8. Polish concrete counters. Give a sealed, dark concrete countertop a muted, natural luster by rubbing melted beeswax over the surface with a chamois cloth. Let it dry and then wipe, says Fred Hueston, director of the National Training Center for Stone and Masonry Trades.
9. Preserve a patina. Seal a copper sink by rubbing it with softened beeswax and polishing off the excess with a lint-free rag, says Shane Jost, owner of Mountains Edge Copperart.
10. Waterproof leather. Combine equal parts beeswax, tallow, and neatsfoot oil (available online). Warm the mixture and use a rag to rub it on your work boots or gloves.
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Propolis, Pollen, Mead and Honey Vinegar information will be coming in the future here.
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