Why are dozens of colorful boxes stacked in this field? To provide homes inside their walls for millions of honey bees, those hardworking pollinators, producers of honey, and tormenters of Winnie-the-Pooh. Wild honey bee colonies build their nests in trees and caves, but manmade boxes also do the trick, and humans have been building their own beehives since antiquity. The modern beehive boxes shown here contain frames to hold honeycombs that bees produce to store their honey, pollen, and young. When the bees have produced plenty of honey, the beekeeper can simply remove the frames to extract some of it, leaving the rest to nourish the hive.
Is that a buzzing sound?
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Anshun Bridge, Chengdu, China
-
Watson Lake in Granite Dells, Arizona
-
Happy Diwali!
-
Does this shark have an Irish accent?
-
Cetacean Saturday
-
Isla del Pescado on the Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia
-
When an ideal microclimate gives you lemons…
-
A sizzling summit hides in the clouds
-
Horsetail Fall in Yosemite National Park, California
-
Autumnal equinox
-
Today is World Refugee Day
-
Rock formations at Sedona, Arizona
-
Travels to the Oregon deep
-
Happy World Photography Day!
-
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial in Washington, DC
-
No, it s not a leaf. Happy Look-alike Day
-
World Elephant Day
-
Celebrating Bike to Work Week, May 14-18
-
Hippo family in Chobe National Park, Botswana
-
Sea Otter Awareness Week
-
Winter solstice
-
International Day for Biosphere Reserves
-
Bowling Ball Beach in Mendocino County, California
-
Fresh water on the Silk Road
-
Monarch butterflies migrate south
-
The largest American bison around
-
The mountain of 30,000 sakura
-
Glendurgan Garden hedge maze is 186 years old
-
Scottish Blackface sheep, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
-
International Rock Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

