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mulchwoman

Do Bumblebees make honey?

mulchwoman
18 years ago

Please forgive my ignorance--I as a gardener would like to know if bumblebees make honey? If so, why isn't it used or talked about. Any information would be most helpful.

Thanks

Pat

Comments (19)

  • SteveInNC
    18 years ago

    Yes, though no more than a thimbleful at a time. For a special cell.

    For more info, click below -

    Here is a link that might be useful: Bumblebee facts

  • Aegis
    18 years ago

    I was cleaning out a bird house last fall that bumblebees had nested in and found some bumblebee honey. It was surprisingly thick, and tasted like ... honey. The BBs had moved out (died?) some time before, so the honey may have been dessicated over time, and not been the same as the fresher stuff.

  • wayne_5 zone 6a Central Indiana
    18 years ago

    All the bumblebees die in the late fall except the young queen who has mated.

  • Beeker
    18 years ago

    I know this is off topic, but after reading a bit on that link about bumblebees, I though I should let you know. I don't know how many people have been stung by a bumblebee, and I'm sure the experience will be somewhat different for everybody. I have been stung by one. It was stuck in my house and I guess it was so stressed that it was on the floor, probably dying, and jumped onto my bare foot and stung me on top of my little toe. Maybe it was the area, maybe I'm just a big baby, but this was my experience: At first, it just felt like a prick, nothing serious, no big deal. Then it started to hurt more.... and more... and still more. Finally, I was in such pain, that I ended up sitting on the floor holding my foot crying. I couldn't understand how it got so bad. I'm not allergic, the stinger wasn't in my toe, and the poor insect was dead. The pain was amazing. To this day, I am still surprised at the way it all happened.

    Sorry to be off topic, but I just thought I'd share that.

  • Konrad___far_north
    18 years ago

    There is a nice Bumble Bee video on this thread....
    Konrad

    Here is a link that might be useful: Bumble Bee

  • Konrad___far_north
    12 years ago

    Just a reminder...
    If yo harvest honey from a bumble nest,... you are destroying a colony. Also, bumbles don't store surplus honey as honey bees do, it's there for brood only.
    A honeybee colony runs from around 20000 to 60000 bees.

  • Konrad___far_north
    12 years ago

    >>Also honey bees normally have anywhere from 6 to 20 thousand bees per colony and aren't as aggresive and are easier to harvest from than bumblebees. I find this false,
    Have played as a kid with nests all the time in the ground for many years, we used to observe them...taken out nest gentle and checked on the brood...most often 50 or 100 bees, [never a thousand] but never ever we were attackt by bumbles, take a honey bee nest apart and and see what happens.

  • Ironcladdoors_yahoo_com
    12 years ago

    I do take honey bee nest appart, and I didn't say that they wouldn't sting or attack, but they are normally easy to work with if you are gentle in your actions, if you go banging around and piss them off sure they will sting the mess out of you, I guess it's with anything, you have to know what you are doing.

  • Konrad___far_north
    12 years ago

    Yes...I do take honey from my hives, most often with shorts but not nearly as gentle as bumble bees.

  • tonybeeguy
    12 years ago

    One thing I noticed is that I hardly ever see honey bees on rhododendren but the bumblebees love it, and the honey made from it is poisonous to humans

  • Charlie
    11 years ago

    Bumble bees ussualy nest in the ground and store their honey in wax balls. Tasted very good, although there was not much of it. In my experience there are only a hundred or less bumble bees in a hive.

  • kevingolike
    11 years ago

    my father grew just out of st luis on a farm,he said they use to get honey from bumble bees,they would(7 brothers and 2 sisters) gather around the nest place a jug half full of water,and everyone had ping pong paddles,some one would stick a pitch fork down into the ground and pop the nest up and everyone would smack the bees until they where gone,alot would drop right into the jug,something about the sound when they flew over it attracted them. he said it was very good not alot but in thumb size cups.

  • Konrad___far_north
    11 years ago

    That wasn't clever, destroying nest.

  • Charlie
    11 years ago

    Bumblebees are harder to anger than honey bees, depending upon the species of honey bee. Some are aggressive and others not so much. One difference that I have found is the way that they sting. The honey bee or some wasps need to set itself in order to insert the stinger, while the bumblebee can fly directly into you and insert its stinger on impact. I have found that bumblebees typicly do not bother you unless they feel threatened or annoyed. Certain species of honey bee, such as the black spanish bee, will sting you for no real reason, except your proximity to them. I have recently started using mason bee blocks to attract mason bees to pollinate my fruit. Honey bees were not active enough in the early spring.

  • Kim Taylor
    8 years ago

    A family digging up bumble bee nests with a pitchfork then killing them with ping pong paddles just for a few ounces of bumble bee "honey" is simply pathetic and ignorant.

  • mulchwoman
    Original Author
    8 years ago

    I certainly agree with you. Mine was just a question on whether they produce honey or not.


  • docmom_gw
    8 years ago

    Fortunately, ignorance can be remedied very easily with a bit of education. But, the education needs to be presented in a helpful, non-judge mental manner, to prevent the self defensive walls from being thrown up. The art of communication.

    Martha

  • tlperella
    8 years ago

    i have a pet bee.... it likes sugar water and pollen. is there anything else i could do for it? it can not fly.

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