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The photo of a bee sitting upon a flower,
licking its nectar, is probably the most familiar image that
we all have of bees.
Only beekeepers see the bees in the first
half of their life, the first three weeks, when they live
and work inside the hive.
Only then do the bees fly outside the hive,
first for two or three days, as guardians of its entrance,
then and for the rest of their life, as pollen, water and
nectar collectors. (This they will transform into honey with
the help of some body fluids)
It is during this period of about twenty-five
days when they become familiar to us. (Only the bees that
reach the end of the harvest season, at the beginning of the
winter, and spend the cold season feeding themselves with
their stocks of pollen and honey, sheltered inside the hive,
without having to use most of their energy, can survive till
next spring, up to six months, all together, at the most).
But the really most important job that bees
do when they sit upon a flower is not collecting this rich
and sweet aliment for us, greedy humans. Since before we even
appeared on Earth, a very large number of plants have been
using these insects as "Cupid", as messengers in
their love affairs, as a very effective way, sometimes the
only way, for their reproduction, like artificial insemination,
so common in our modern times.
I'm talking about pollination; the way complete
plants (Phanerogams) use the fecundation of their own seeds
for reproduction.
Pollination, passing the pollen produced
in the stamen (the masculine organ of the flower) to the stigma
(the female) that receives the pollen, situated on the top
of the pistil, and from there to the ovaries, where the seeds
are fecundated by it) is done by different forms: Auto-pollination,
when everything happens in every single flower or in different
flowers of the same plant, directly without needing any outside
help, or just by the wind (Anemophillas flower). (There is
also pollination by the water, for some kind of grass and
aquatic-plants that works in similar ways).
The flowers of these types of plants are
normally small, insignificant, without aromas, and they don't
produce nectars or anything that's interesting for the majority
of insects. Good examples of these plants are wheat, corn
and oats, as well as tobacco and peas and also the oak, black
poplar, linden, elm, walnut and pine trees, among others.
Finally, there is the crossed pollination,
pollen from the flowers of a plant pollinating flowers of
other plants of the same species. Those are the flowers that
we all know and appreciate for their colours, aroma and beauty,
the ones that produce nectars to attract and feed a good amount
of small creatures (zoophilla flower), that the plant uses
in a perfect symbiosis to complete its vital circle.
The crossed pollination of the zoophilla
flower is basically done by insects (entomophilla flower),
but also by birds (ornitophilla flower), bats and other small
mammals, even snails and little reptiles.
Among the insects, the bees, the different
kinds of honeybees, are without doubt the most important of
them all, the most responsible for this job, because of their
number and how hard they work. The entire bee-society depends
on it; even their own hairy bodies are highly built up especially
for doing this job. Pollen and nectar (honey) is what they
eat and they can't survive any other way.
Visiting the Hives at "Can Pep Cudulá"
To speak (I should say to listen and learn
about pollination and about bees in general, Gary and I went
in March, the beginning of our spring, about two weeks before
the official date of the real spring, the bee-season, to visit
one of the best beekeepers of the Island and also a good friend,
José Planells "Pep Cudulá", who lives
and keeps some of his hives in his finca, near Sant Llorenç.
(Gary wanted to take photos of the groundwork with the bees,
of the interior of a real hive and of the work of the beekeepers
collecting the swarms, preparing the new panels for the new
season and replacing the old honey-panels)
As our conversation started about the priceless
job that bees do in the pollination of plants and the enormous
benefit that this means, not just for the plants, but to humans
and life in general, Pep Cudulá says with his good
manners and tranquil voice: "Perhaps we will never reach
to understand and appreciate what this little insect has really
done and still does for evolution of life and the progress
of the human kind".
Then I asked him to clear up why bees are
so efficient doing this job. How, if they fly all over, from
plant to plant and from flower to flower can they be so precise?
Why there are not many accidents in the crossing pollination?
"Once the bees start to collect the
nectar and pollen from a specific kind of flower, normally
one of the most plentiful in the area at a certain time of
the year, they continue with the same flower until the harvest
is completed and the honey panels are full".
"There are some accidents sometimes,
for example if you have a field planted with sweet peppers,
and there are near by some plants of hot-peppers (chiles),
because they are the same family of plants, soon you will
have a mixture of hot and sweet peppers, even in the same
plant, this can give you a hot surprise sometimes, specially
when you mean to eat a salad or any other dish made with sweet
peppers, this can happen as well with different kinds of melons
and cucumbers, also it is easy to find bitter almonds in what
is supposed to be a sweet almond tree, but some of these accidents
are even profitable and help to form new varieties. This only
happens between plants of the same families and in general,
we can say that bees are far more precise then man as far
as knowing different plants and flowers.
"So we can also speak of different
kinds of honey, depending on which type of plants the bees
have been visiting. The difference in the colour, aroma, thickness
and taste are obvious if you can see and taste them one by
the side of the other, even for the non-experts.
"Most of the honey that we buy in jars
at the shops is a mixture of different types mixed by the
industrial experts looking for a specific quality and homogeneity,
as it happens for example with coffee and some wines. But
here, as we don't produce in industrial ways, our honeys are
all different and we call them by the name of the plant, "rosemary
honey", "thyme honey", "azahar honey"
(azahar is Spanish for the orange-tree flower and its aroma.
I don't know if there is an English word for it). My favourite
is the carob-tree-flower honey. I was honoured with the second
prize presenting this type of honey in the first and only
honey show in our Islands.
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Pep Codulá
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Bee Hives at Can Pep Codulá
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Pep Codulá on his way to attend
the bees
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Pep Codulá checking the honey
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Pep Codulá amongst his bees
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Pep Codulá smoking the bees
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All Pictures © Copyright
Gary Hardy (March 2002)
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We shall continue for another week of two with Pep Cudulá
and his deep knowledge about bees and interesting practical
lessons about Nature in general.
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José P Ribas
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