I sent a sample of summer honey last year to the National Honey Monitoring Scheme, who analyse pollen DNA to see what bees have been foraging on. The results are most intriguing.
45% of the pollen was bramble, about 21% white clover, 8% turnip, 6% field beans, 4% unspecified brassica, then on down to small percentages of various wild and garden flowers and trees.
Some of my bees, however, must have packed suitcases, as there was also pollen from syzygium cumini (Java plum or jambolan), caylusea abyssinica (as the name suggests, a native of East Africa), and trifolium thalii, (mountain clover, found in Switzerland and the Pyrenees). Nicos, if you see my bees, send them straight home please!
After a fair bit of searching, I found that the caylusea is a frequent impurity of niger seed, so it's nice to know someone is feeding the wild birds, but the Java plum has me stumped as it's a tropical tree.
45% of the pollen was bramble, about 21% white clover, 8% turnip, 6% field beans, 4% unspecified brassica, then on down to small percentages of various wild and garden flowers and trees.
Some of my bees, however, must have packed suitcases, as there was also pollen from syzygium cumini (Java plum or jambolan), caylusea abyssinica (as the name suggests, a native of East Africa), and trifolium thalii, (mountain clover, found in Switzerland and the Pyrenees). Nicos, if you see my bees, send them straight home please!
After a fair bit of searching, I found that the caylusea is a frequent impurity of niger seed, so it's nice to know someone is feeding the wild birds, but the Java plum has me stumped as it's a tropical tree.
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