Let's plant for the bees - and have fun while we are doing so!

The weather is finally turning and the time has come to get outside and plant for the pollinators.

I think it is safe to say the white stuff is done visiting until the appropriate season again. So, grab those shovels, put on those gloves or just get the hands dirty! I offer some fun ways to plant some beautiful color and bring amazing scenery to your yard. The bees, butterflies, humming birds and other insects will show their appreciation and pollinate your beautiful flowers. You will offer food and shelter for the pollinators and other insects we need so badly.

Grab a slingshot and fire away!!! Sling those seed bombs and get some color in hard to reach places. Plus, the are fun to launch.

Grab a seed kit and plant some wildflowers, sunflowers or wonderful pollinator mix and watch your yard come to life this season.

The plant-able seed cards are just adorable. Give your friend or loved one a thoughtful note and then they can plant the card to enjoy some pretty flowers. A card and flowers all in one!

Last but not least, there are some wonderful seed bombs in drawstring bags that offer edible flowers, bee friendly flowers and even some culinary herbs for the cook in your family.

You can find most of these items on my website. All are available in the store - when we open back up. For now you can order and pick up curbside. If you can’t find what you are looking for on the website just reach out!

Spring has sprung and planting has begun!

An invite to Science Now! - STEM & STEAM

On January 23, 2020 I took part in the Thomas C. Armstrong Wayne Middle School PTO Science Now! expo. An evening of interactive demo and hands on learning experiences for the kids, and no kidding, the big kids, too! Even moms and dads, big brothers and sisters engaged themselves in the wonders of beeswax and honey.

Many tables filled the cafeteria, each representing a business where STEM & STEAM can be found. STEM is science, technology, engineering and math. While STEAM includes art. There was virtual reality, plastic molding and silicone demonstrations, the Rochester Museum and Science center even had a spot. I was parked between the DEC, think deer decoy and a remote controlled wagging tail, and Intergrow - the indoor greenhouse which emits that eerie glow towards the sky in the evenings. On those foggy nights…well, eerie doesn’t seem to be fitting for the supernatural scenery that is created. Actually, the nice young man that headed the table for Intergrow and I had some good conversation regarding the bumblebees they use for indoor pollinating.

The evening was buzzing with eager and excited children and their parents. All here to learn how STEM & STEAM can be found in businesses in and around the community. My 2 tables had 4 demonstrations or activities for the visitors to enjoy.

They could learn the why, what and how about bees and their products of the hive. There was a frame of used drawn comb, a jar of crushed comb and some honey, crushed comb that had been given back to the bees to cleanup, a round of rendered beeswax and several of my products that had been made from the beeswax. The hands on items helped attendees understand how a frame of beeswax can be turned into a candle, hard lotion bar, lip balm or beeswax wrap for your sandwiches.

They could also try on beekeepers gear. There was a tote full of veils in all styles, gloves, a couple pullover vests and even a couple jackets. They could puff the (empty) smoker and feel the bristles of the bee brush that is used to gently brush the bees from frames, or yourself.

Many enjoyed the honey tasting station. I brought 6 varieties of honey to taste. Our local honey in summer and fall. Maine blueberry honey. Washington buckwheat. Patagonia rainforest honey and the newest edition to the tasting table, African Forest honey. So many people were surprised that honey could taste so different or that there was actually different types of honey. Yes, there are! Forty of them are on the tasting table right in my store in the village of Webster waiting for you to have a taste.

However, I think the most popular activity was Can you Spot the Queen? I had some large visual posters by Hilary Kearny, at the Girl Next Door Honey. She takes some amazing photos and turns them into useful tools for teaching about bees. These were specifically about searching for the queen bee. If you could find her in a given time you won a bee pin or honey stick. The bee pins were almost gone by the end of the evening! Everyone loved the honey sticks, too!

I think we all enjoyed ourselves; talking about bees, tasting local honey and far away honey, too! I’m looking forward to the next Science Expo!

If you have a group or event and would like to learn about the products of the hive, send me a message or give me call!