Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Beetwixt & Beetween’ Category

“I

do not

believe in

God because I’ve

never seen him.  If he

wanted me to believe in him,

then surely he would come and speak

with me.  He would come in through my door

saying “Here I am!”  But if God is the hive and

the honeybee, and pollen and nectar and sun and moon,

then I believe in her and I believe in her at every moment, and my

life is a prayer and a celebration and a communion with the eyes

and through the ears.  I honor her by living spontaneously,

as a woman who opens her eyes and truly sees, and

I call her the hive and the honeybee and pollen

and sun and moon and I love her

without thinking of her, and

I think of her by seeing

and hearing, and

I am with

her,

I.”

 

The Bee Mistress’s interpretation of “O Guardador de Rebhanhos” by the Portugese poet Fernando Pessoa (Pessoa 1973). 

From p.68 of “The Shamanic Way of the Bee” by Simon Buxton (published by Destiny Books/Inner Traditions, 2004). 

Read Full Post »

by Antonio Machado

====================

Last night, as I was sleeping,
I dreamt a marvelous error;
That I had a beehive here inside my heart.
And the golden bees were making white combs
And sweet honey from my past mistakes.
 

Read Full Post »

A funny cartoon about a more serious problem.  This time last year I had three hives.  Today I have one. 

Missing Honeybee Mystery

Found at: http://www.hive-mind.com/bee/blog/2007/04/beecalpyse-now.html

Read Full Post »

Yes, their eyes are sensitive more to the blue end of the spectrum and into ultra violet. Flowers reflect large amounts of ultra violet light and to a bee will be very bright. Bees are totally red blind.

So they can see all the colours of the rainbow including UV, but not Red or IR.

I wonder what our world would look like if we were red blind?

Fact from: http://www.beeginners.info/

Read Full Post »

An interesting experiment known as the SCHAFBERG experiment (named after the mountain) demonstrates the sophistication of bee navigation.  The only source of food for a colony of bees was put on the far side of a mountain, the bees could not fly over the mountain only around it. What direction would the bees indicate in their dancing?.  The answer was surprising, the bees indicated the direction exactly across the mountain at an angle they had never flown but had calculated in their head. The distance indication however, was for the long flight around the hill.

More at: http://www.beeginners.info/

Read Full Post »

The beekeeping lady then worked quickly.  She put a large sheet on the ground and put the box with the bees on top. In a very short space of time all the bees were gone and there was no more noise.  She slowly lifed the box and put it back into her car. 

She then removed her veil and her beuatiful face shone as she presented us with two pots of unlabelled honey!  It was very kind of her, since I thought we might have to pay her to take the bees away.  Sometimes Dad paid our gardener, Jack, a little extra to help him trap the moles.  And Mum had paid the rat catcher last year to come and remove the rats from the back sheds.  Why should the Beekeeping lady actually give us a present for taking these stinging insects away from our garden? All these unanswered questions.

Mum asked the beekeeping lady if she would like a cup of tea.  (Mum always offered visitors a cup of tea).  However, the beekeeping lady said that she had to get the bees into a hive before the sun went down.  She left quietly, efficiently and gracefully, almost like an angel might vanish behind a cloud.

And we were left with the two jars of honey.  We opened one of them straight away and had honey on toast for tea in the chairs which had been laid out by Mum next to the Willow Tree.  The honey was delicious!  And what an eventful afternoon it had been!

Read Full Post »

Cranach painted the first version of Cupid Complaining to Venus in 1527; in subsequent years, he and his workshop produced at least twenty-five versions of the theme, a fine example of which is now in the National Gallery.

Cupid complaining to Venus 

A Dürer watercolour of 1514, to which Cranach’s paintings are unrelated, is the earliest known visual interpretation of the theme in the Northern European artistic context.  The subject ultimately derives from pseudo-Theocritean Idyll XIX, (the Honey Thief), which tells the story of Cupid’s complaint to his mother after being stung by a bee as he was stealing a honeycomb. 

From: http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1477-4658.2007.00337.x?cookieSet=1

Picture from: http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/cgi-bin/WebObjects.dll/CollectionPublisher.woa/wa/largeImage?workNumber=NG6344&collectionPublisherSection=work

Read Full Post »

Occult tradition states that the mysterious figure Melchizedek, who is mentioned in the Bible in connection with giving communion to the patriarch Abraham, is an entity that brought three gifts to earth from the planet Venus: the bee, wheat, and the mineral asbestos. 

Meeting of abraham and melchizadek.jpg


The tradition is an allegorical one.  The meaning of the three gifts may be partially understood as symbolizing three grades of initiation. In the first grade, one serves (bee). In the second grade, the initiate focuses on understanding and practicing the development of the many out of the one (wheat). In the third grade, the initiate becomes a channel of the Divine Fire; he burns, but is not consumed (asbestos).

Story from: http://www.polarissite.net/page26.html

Picture from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Meeting_of_abraham_and_melchizadek.jpg

Read Full Post »

“We have called this book the ‘Book of the Bee,’ because we have gathered of the blossoms of the two Testaments and of the flowers of the holy Books, and have placed them therein for thy benefit.

As the common bee with gauzy wings flies about, and flutters over and lights upon flowers of various colours, and upon blossoms of divers odours, selecting and gathering from all of them the materials which are useful for the construction of her handiwork; and having first of all collected the materials from the flowers, carries them upon her thighs, and bringing them to her dwelling, lays a foundation for her building with a base of wax; then gathering in her mouth some of the heavenly dew which is upon the blossoms of spring, brings it and blows it into these cells; and weaves the comb and honey for the use of men and her own nourishment: in like manner have we, the infirm, hewn the stones of corporeal words from the rocks of the Scriptures which are in the Old Testament, and have laid them down as a foundation for the edifice of the spiritual law.

And as the bee carries the waxen substance upon her thighs because of its insipidity and tastelessness, and brings the honey in her mouth because of its sweetness and value; so also have we laid down the corporeal law by way of substratum and foundation, and the spiritual law for a roof and ceiling to the edifice of the spiritual tower.

And as the expert gardener and orchard-keeper goes round among the gardens, and seeking out the finest sorts of fruits takes from them slips and shoots, and plants them in his own field; so also have we gone into the garden of the divine Books, and have culled therefrom branches and shoots, and have planted them in the ground of this book for thy consolation and benefit.

When thou, O brother, art recreating thyself among these plants, those which appear and which thou dost consider to be insipid and tasteless, leave for thy companions, for they may be more suitable to others (than to thee); but, upon those which are sweet, and which sweeten the palate of thy understanding, do thou feed and satisfy thy hunger.  If, however, owing to their fewness, they do not fill thee, seek in succession for their roots, and from thence shall thy want be satisfied.

Know also, O brother, that where there is true love, there is no fear; and where there is freedom of speech, there is no dread; and we should not dare to be so rash as to enter upon these subjects, which are beyond the capacity of our simple understanding, unless we relied upon thy immaculate love; because, in the words of one of the inspired, ‘When thou findest honey, eat (only) so much as is sufficient for thee, lest, when thou art sated, thou vomit it’; that is to say, do not enquire (too closely) into the divine words.”

======================================================

Extracted from the Book of the Bee – an historical/theological compilation containing numerous bible legends. It was written by Syrian Nestorian Solomon, Bishop of Bassora (c. 1222) in Syriac and translated into English by E.A. Wallis Budge in 1886.

From:  http://www.sacred-texts.com/chr/bb/bb00.htm

Read Full Post »

During the construction of the Panama Canal, a Dr. W.E. Auginbaugh described an operation he witnessed.  A native Indian surgeon performed this surgery while chain smoking in a filthy environment. He sutured the injury by setting beetles on the open wound.  The beetles snapped their mandibles shut and sealed it acting like staples.   The Doctor then cut off the beetle’s heads, covered the wound in honey and finished by covering it all with wax.  The results were excellent!

From: http://luna.clubyachats.com/index.php/food-for-thought/honey.html

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »