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HONEY DROPS

January 05, 2025
by Dr. Jeri Fink
1 Comment

*North Dakota is the top honey producing state in the U.S. with over 31 million pounds a year.

*A single bee creates 1/12 of a teaspoon of honey during her lifetime.

*U.S. imports honey from India, Argentina, Brazil, New Zealand, and Mexico.

*One-third of the U.S. diet comes from insect-pollinated plants.

*Honey lacks moisture and is acidic so bacteria can’t live in it.

*The late Queen Elizabeth II gave Pope Francis a jar of honey as an official gift in 2014.

*There are as many different flavors of honey as there are flowers for bees to forage.

*The ancient Greek physician and father of medicine, Hippocrates, believed that honey prolonged life, helped ear pain, and healed wounds.

*It takes 2 million flower visits for a honey bee colony to produce 1 pound of honey.

 

 

*The most expensive honey in the world, Elvish, also known as Red honey, can cost as much as $8,000 per pound. It comes from the remote highlands of Turkey, is labor-intensive, and has a limited flowering season.

*Honey doesn’t spoil.

*Honey and products made with honey can’t be given to human infants under 1 year old because their digestive systems are too immature and it can lead to infant botulism – a serious form of food poisoning.

*To produce one pound of honey, a colony of bees fly, collectively, about 55,000 miles.

*Honey comes in different colors from light and clear to dark and cloudy.

*A honeybee can fly at about 15 miles per hour.

*Honeybees are the only insect that produces food for humans.

*Honeybees never sleep.

 

*A worker bee visits 50-100 flowers on each trip.

*Honey has a lot of uses beyond sweetening – cough suppressant, sore throat remedy, skin moisturizing, and of course, cooking.

About the Author
We live in crazy world. It's hard to guess what comes next. I thrive on change, people, and ideas. I've published 37 books and hundreds of blogs and articles. As an author, photographer, and family therapist, my blogs combine the serious, the funny, and the facts. Each blog is a story that informs and entertains readers. Please join me!
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One Comment
  1. Craig Oldfather January 16, 2025 at 8:12 pm Reply

    Wow! I love honey (who doesn’t) and I know bees are very important, but I had no idea how hard they work to produce honey! They deserve paid days off, pension plans and benefits! Seriously, what an interesting article about a unique and wonderful food that I have taken a bit too much for granted. Thanks for your great stories!

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