Have you ever wondered how bees make honey?
Step 1:
The worker bees will land inside or close to the flower and suck the nectar out using her proboscis (tongue) and collect in it a little sac called a crop or other wise known as a honey stomach.
Step 2:
When her nectar sac is full, the honeybee will return to the hive. The worker bee will then pass the nectar to a hive bee by regurgitating the liquid into the hive bees mouth.
Step 3:
The worker bee will fly off and continue to collect nectar again whilst the hive bee deposits the nectar into a honeycomb.
Initially the honey stored in the cells is still a bit wet, so the bees fan their wings over it, which helps the water to evaporate. After some time, the water content is reduced to around 17%.
Step 4:
When most of the water has evaporated from the honeycomb, the bee seals the comb with a secretion of liquid from its abdomen, which eventually hardens into beeswax. This process is a little bit like putting a lid on a jar.
During one bees lifetime, it will only make around 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey. To make a whole pound of honey, the worker bees need to fly 50,000 miles and visit about 2 million flowers.
So the next time you have a trickle of honey over your porridge or over your pancakes, appreciate all the hard work bees have put into making it.