00:04You drink it in your tea and spread it on your bread, but what is honey, really?
00:09The sweet stuff is made from the nectar of flowering plants and stockpiled inside beehives to eat during times of scarcity.
00:17But how do industrious bees make this thick, golden liquid?
00:21It starts when honeybees extract nectar, a sugary liquid, from flowers using their long, tube-shaped tongues.
00:29This nectar is then stored in the bee's extra stomach or crop.
00:33As it's sloshing around in there, the nectar mixes with enzymes that transform its chemical composition and pH,
00:40making it more suitable for long-term storage.
00:43When the bee returns to the hive, it passes the nectar to another bee by, well, regurgitating it into that bee's mouth.
00:50So in one sense, honey is in part bee vomit.
00:54The bees repeat this process until the nectar is deposited into a honeycomb for safekeeping.
01:01But at this point, the nectar is still a vicious liquid, nothing like the thick, sugary syrup you use at home.
01:07To get all that excess water out of the honey, the bees get to work again, fanning the honey with their wings to speed up the evaporation process.
01:16Once most of the water is gone, the bees seal the honey up in the honeycomb using a liquid from their abdomen that eventually hardens into beeswax.
01:26The beeswax protects the honey from air and water, so it can be stored safely throughout the cold, scarce winter months.
01:33How bees make honey, just another one of life's little mysteries.
01:38What about the birds being heard on the bumids?
01:40So what you say is that a lot of advice might never actually take a look from the birds, plant-likeose, Horizont as a seed daran,
01:41which Padrish it must also Feuer have.
01:51If it's in the meantime of thelynn brightspeak, it's on the finder your recover.
01:56Don't worry, I'll be using that as well as the of tuberå¦s.