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:
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Striated heron on a Victoria water lily, Pantanal, Brazil
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Regional Park of Migliarino, San Rossore, Massaciuccoli, Italy
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Darwin s Arch
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Porto, Portugal
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Petrified Forest National Park
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Cypress trees in George L. Smith State Park, Georgia
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Friendship Day in the City of Brotherly Love
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Pups of the prairie
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Misool, Raja Ampat Islands, Indonesia
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World of WearableArt Awards
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Big Bend National Park anniversary
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World Oceans Day
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Cheetah in Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania
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Atlanta Botanical Garden
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A valley view at 9,000 feet
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Abbey Gardens in Bury St Edmunds, England
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Sitka shines on Alaska Day
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Pont Rouge
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Nakupenda Beach Nature Reserve, Zanzibar, Tanzania
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National Frog Month
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Visiting the Mamanuca Islands for Fiji Day
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National Mushroom Month
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Pont Alexandre III, Paris, France
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Pride 2025
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Fossil Day
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Cecil Brewer Staircase, London
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Over and under the delta
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Mountain goats at Glacier National Park in Montana
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Kochelsee in Bavaria
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Rocky mountain pi
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

