Our very own Bee Man has made his television debut!
Holt Bee Farm has been featured on LiveGreen Tennessee. We are all very excited and proud of Greg!
Check out Season 4 episode 12: http://www.livegreentv.org/watch-full-episodes
Or check it out on YouTube!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QaoIFMBdP2c&feature=player_embedded
Friday, August 10, 2012
Sourwood...The best there is.
Last Sunday, I was heading up I-40 to the top of
the Cumberland Plateau, Crossville, Tennessee, to visit little brother Morris
and his wife Maggie. Their place out on Highway 68 is a lovely place to visit
and I'm sure to live. I was looking
forward to the visit, but not particularly to the disappointing task at hand: bringing
a load of empty honey suppers back home to be treated for wax moths and put to
bed for the winter. Back in June after robbing
the bees, I placed clean supers on the hives housed at Morris's farm, hoping to
get the suppers filled with the best honey in the world-- Tennessee Sourwood. An
old man told me one time God planted the sourwood at higher elevations so the
angels wouldn't have to travel so far from heaven to get it. After tasting it with my wife's buttermilk biscuits,
I'm a believer that the old man was right; God had a hand in the placement as
well as in the creation.
http://tennesseeplateau.blogspot.com/2009/07/sweet-taste-of-sourwood.html |
I had been told by experts not to expect any sourwood honey this year because of the dry summer. I was a believer there too. After having a cup of coffee, Morris and I put on our bee garb and lit our smokers. He pulled the first top while I manned the smoker. As the top came up, the bees went down into the super to escape from the smoke. I looked down between the frames and there it was—capped honey! Not only the top super, but the two under it were full. We went on from that hive to the next and the next; all the hives were full of sourwood honey. The excitement was equal to catching a five-pound Tennessee Small Mouth on a fly rod (or how exciting I would imagine that being…I’ve never done that).Sunday was a good day. If you think about it, most days are good for beekeepers if you look real hard.
I would like to apologize for taking so long since our last
post. Funny thing though—not one person complained.
Makes you wonder… ;)
-greg
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