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Monthly Archives: September 2023

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07 Sep
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Honeycomb is the natural beeswax

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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07 Sep
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This subfamily includes orchid bees

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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07 Sep
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Propolis, sometimes called bee glue

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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07 Sep
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Royal jelly is a substance produced

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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07 Sep
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This subfamily includes cuckoo bees

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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07 Sep
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Beeswax is a natural substance secreted

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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07 Sep
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This subfamily includes carpenter bees

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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07 Sep
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Honey is perhaps the most famous bee

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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07 Sep
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This subfamily includes honey bees

he honey bee is a species of bee known for import ant role of three main types in Honey bees are pollination and honey production.

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Recent Posts

  • Honeycomb is the natural beeswax
  • This subfamily includes orchid bees
  • Propolis, sometimes called bee glue
  • Royal jelly is a substance produced
  • This subfamily includes cuckoo bees

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  • September 2023
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Recent Posts

Honeycomb is the natural beeswax
September 9, 2023
This subfamily includes orchid bees
September 9, 2023
Propolis, sometimes called bee glue
September 9, 2023

Categories

  • Beekeeping
  • Delivery
  • Honey
  • Honey Packets
  • Honey&Comb
  • Uncategorized

Archives

  • September 2023
  • August 2023

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About Us

At the Pollinator Project Thepollinatorproject.org we will create habitat for our greatest resource, bees and other pollinators.

Contact Us

  • Meyer Farms 8236 Rattle Run Rd., Columbus, MI 48063
  • 586-612-5080
  • Volunteer@pollinatorproject.org
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There are over 1,400 species of bats globally comprising almost 20% of all mammals on earth. The largest one with a wing span of over 6 feet.

While the average bat can consume 10,000 mosquitoes per day in your own backyard.
Recent studies estimate that bats eat enough pests to save more than $1 billion per year in crop damage and pesticide costs in the United States corn industry alone. This is reason enough to take a look at bats in the role of reducing the amount of chemicals that are sprayed on crops.

There are more than 530 species of flowering plants that rely on bats as either their major or exclusive pollinators. Some of these plants include agave (which are harvested to supply the multimillion dollar tequila industry), bananas, and balsa trees (which produce the world’s lightest timber).

There are over 350 species of known hummingbirds that pollinate a wide variety of large flowers, some of which are directly specialized to be pollinated only by hummingbirds. Hummingbirds can visit up to 2000 flowers per day and that’s pretty impressive. They are also the only bird that can fly backwards, and they are considered a keystone species essential for life on the planet.

While it’s true that butterflies and moths are not as efficient as honeybees at pollination, the almost 20,000 species of butterflies globally, the number of flowers they can visit per day more than make up for the difference. Butterflies in their prime can visit up to 5000 flowers in one day.

Butterfly houses are inexpensive to buy, and very easy to build. You can help the population by providing a place for them.

Stay in the honeybee lodge with your group or conference. Vacation amongst the pollinators, eat in our farm to table restaurant with a pollinator-based menu.

Stay in one of our many Bee-N-B’s scattered throughout a square mile of wilderness. Right out in the wild or 20 feet up in the air, or even on the island, in a yurt. You decide how you want to interact with the pollinators.

Build your green, dream home on the edge of The Pollinator Project.

We are currently looking for:

  • Director of Gardens
  • Director of Bees
  • Director of butterflies
  • Director of hummingbirds
  • Director of bats
  • Director of grounds
  • Gardeners
  • Landscapers
  • Maintenance
  • All areas of Hotel, Restaurant, and hospitality are available
  • Many positions for senior citizens
  • Many positions for autistic children
  • Many positions for veterans and disabled veterans

If you have your doctorate in biology or entomology or anything, having to do with pollinators, come do research with us in our state of the art facility and on our one-of-a-kind, pollinator habitat area
If you’re working on your doctorate and you want to do pollinator research, come do it with us. If you want to be involved in pollinator research, come do it with us we are going to build a world-class research facility. We are going to study pollinators on thousands of acres of organically managed pollinator habitat.
We are going to partner with universities all over the world to do research on bees, hummingbirds, butterflies , and bats. We’re gonna solve this problem. Together there’s nothing we can’t do.

The first things on the list are;

  • Varroa mites.
  • American foulbrood (AFB)
  • Black queen cell virus (BQCV)
  • Deformed wing virus (DWV)
  • Kashmir bee virus (KBV)
  • White nose syndrome (WNS) in bats
  • Pesticide usage in all pollinator environments
  • Natural remedies for all of these, so we don’t cause more problems.

There are over 20,000 bee species worldwide, including our most treasured natural resource the honey bee, Wild bee species live on every continent except Antarctica.

Honey bees alone pollinate 80 percent of all flowering plants, including more than 130 types of fruits and vegetables. Unfortunately, bee populations have dropped alarmingly across North America, as have the populations of many other pollinator species. There are many species of bees that almost never or lack the ability to sting including mason, bees, and they are very easy to raise on your property. Get involved do your part every home should have a hive.

Not only should every home in America have a pollinator house, but they should leave pollinator habitat on their property. Thepollinatorproject.org will provide you with free seed and a plan to develop pollinator habitat on your property. Even if it’s a raised bed or pots on your deck, a small flower garden, the roof of your building, everything counts, a bat house up in a tree, a butterfly structure in your front yard. No area is too small. We will help you have something flowering throughout the entire growing season, and a place for your pollinators to live. Call us today, get involved, volunteer, donate, do something.

Beekeeping, or apiculture, is the practice of maintaining bee colonies in man made hives, often for honey production and pollination services. Beekeepers oversee the health of the colonies, harvest hive products, and require a vast knowledge of bee biology and behavior.

Human existence is absolutely dependent on honeybee survival “No bees, No food, No people” it’s really that simple.

Get involved learn how to be a pollinator keeper, bees butterflies, hummingbirds, bats, etc. We can teach you everything you need to know.

Beekeepers across America keep over 100 million hives and move them all over the country to pollinate the food in your grocery store. We are falling behind a little bit every year and we lose almost half the bees. Every year.

We can make that change together, we can solve this problem, we will do the research and we will build the habitat with your help.