Bee Skeps and Honey
Transcription
Bee Skeps and Honey
18th Century Bee Keeping and the Ogden House Honey Project A Whitdogg Production Honey bees were important to the colonists. • Europeans did not drink water – Ale predominant in England • Barley sowing – Rum imported from West Indies – Cider more self sufficient • Brought apple trees and honey bees Honeybees were brought by early settlers. • Transported in straw skeps in a wooden box. • The box sat on the deck at the stern of the ship. There were other important reasons for bee keeping. • Medicinal value of honey – Used with other herbs to cure many ailments (coughs) – Applied to open wounds to prevent bacterial infection • Culinary value of honey – Preservative for ham and fruits – Quick energy source – Mead, a drink made from honey • Beeswax value – – – – Make candles Waterproof leather Preserve wood Bind wounds How the colonists made honey. • Early Spring – Place the skeps surrounded by bee-loving plants and empty skeps • Summer – Queen produces many new bees – Population becomes too large for the skep – A number of bees create a new queen and “hive off” to an empty bee skep • Late Fall – Using a burning rag, beekeeper destroys all but one bee skep • Winter – Protect bee skep for next year's production Two bee skeps in the Ogden House garden will represent this practice. • No bees inside The Ogden House Honey Project Goal: • Bring public awareness to the historic importance of honey and Ogden house What's the buzz: the who, what, where. • Tess Brown: beekeeper, adjunct English professor, Fairfield University • Two hives to make raw honey – Propolis – Strengthens immune system • Oaklawn Cemetery
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