Bee Pollen???????

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H

halzey68

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ive seen a couple remarks about it, and they say theyll talk about that another time.

What are the benefits of using it?
How is it used?
What does it do? where do you get it?
 
sorry ...bees dont have pollen...they carry it from plant to plant...but for a bee to pollenate a MJ Plant I supose you could..but I dont think I realy understand the question....sorry..I did bring it back to the top 4U
 
i think all a bee would do is carry the pollen from the male plant to pollinate the female considering this is what they do with flowers in order to get the nectar. but in this case all it would make is seeds in your bud! in my opinion im not 100%
 
pass high school biology. the pubic skools in californication aren't that bad(lol). I know that bees carry pollen from flower to flower, the difference would be i guess that bees just dont gather pollen from 1 type of bush or plant at a time. pollenation occurs as bees move from plant to plant , tracking pollen with them from multiple plant types.

I guess i was wondering if there are pollens from plants other than MJ that would be beneficial to the flowering process??
Is there a product called "bee pollen"?
thanks for at least moving this forward.

im not sure if it was hick, or massproducer, that mentioned bee pollen. i'll bet one of them fill's in the gaps soon, so thanks in advance again...lol:eek:
 
If your asking if other plants can pollinate MJ, no they cannot, if a Bee or any other insect lands on a male MJ plant and gets pollen on it, the insect is turned into a living threat to un pollinated MJ females, the insect could fly a mile or 2 with MJ pollen on it and fertilise a female MJ plant a long distance away.
 
Is there a product called "bee pollen"?
Sure is:).
200x357.14285714286_images_Bee-Pollen-180g-SWN.jpg
 
i was wondering if pollens or nectar from different plant species would be beneficial. not to pollenate. thanks for the link Bomb. cool sight, every1 should check it out.
 
bees pollen is the most complete food source ever discovered. It is used by bees to feed their young, and is the best natural vitiman you can take. It is also loaded with beneficials.

I am in the process of experiementing with bee's pollen, to see what the effect is on plants. This is an organic source of food for the plants and for the soil.
 
What Is Pollen?

Pollen is the male seed of flowers. It is required for the fertilization of the plant. The tiny particles consist of 50/1,000-millimeter corpuscles, formed at the free end of the stamen in the heart of the blossom. Every variety of flower in the universe puts forth a dusting of pollen. Many orchard fruits and agricultural food crops do, too.

Bee pollen is the food of the young bee and it is approximately 40% protein. It is considered one of nature's most completely nourishing foods. It contains nearly all nutrients required by humans. About half of its protein is in the form of free amino acids that are ready to be sued directly by the body. Such highly assimilable protein can contribute significantly to one's protein needs.

Gathering pollen is not as easy as it sounds. Once a honeybee arrives at a flower, she settles herself in and nimbly scrapes off the powdery loose pollen from the stamen with her jaws and front legs, moistening it with a dab of the honey she brought with her from the hive. The enlarged and broadened tarsal segments of her legs have a thick trimming of bristles, called pollen combs. The bee uses these combs to brush the gold powder from her coat and legs in mid-flight. With a skillful pressing movement of her auricle, which is used as a hammer, she pushes the gathered gold into her baskets. Her pollen baskets, surrounded by a fringe of long hairs, are simply concave areas located on the outside of her tibias. When the bee's baskets are fully loaded, the microscopic golden dust has been tamped down into a single golden grain, or granule.

One of the most interesting facts about bee pollen is that it cannot be synthesized in a laboratory. When researchers take away a bee's pollen-filled comb and feed her manmade pollen, the bee dies even though all the known nutrients are present in the lab-produced synthesized food. Many thousands of chemical analyses of bee pollen have been made with the very latest diagnostic equipment, but there are still some elements present in bee pollen that science cannot identify. The bees add some mysterious "extra" of their own. These unidentifiable elements may very well be the reason bee pollen works so spectacularly against so many diverse conditions of ill health.

Honeybees do double duty. They are programmed to gather pollen and carry it back to the hive as food for the colony. However, even more important as far as humans are concerned, they are also responsible for the pollination of more than 80 percent of green growing things. As bees buzz from blossom to blossom, microscopic pollen particles coat their stubby little bodies so densely that they sometimes look like little yellow fuzz balls. When they arrive at the next flower, a portion of the live golden dust is transferred to that blossom and pollination is accomplished.

It is important to recognize that a one teaspoon dose of pollen takes one bee working eight hours a day for one month to gather. Each bee pollen pellet, contains over two million flower pollen grains and one teaspoonful contains over 2.5 billion grains of flower pollen.

Complete Nutrition

Bee pollen contains all the essential components of life. The percentage of rejuvenating elements in bee pollen remarkably exceeds those present in brewer's yeast and wheat germ. Bee pollen corrects the deficient or unbalanced nutrition, common in the customs of our present-day civilization of consuming incomplete foods, often with added chemical ingredients, which expose us to physiological problems as various as they are numerous.

Pollen is considered an energy and nutritive tonic in Chinese medicine. Cultures throughout the world use it in a surprising number of applications: for improving endurance and vitality, extending longevity, aiding recovery from chronic illness, adding weight during convalescence, reducing cravings and addictions, regulating the intestines, building new blood, preventing infectious diseases such as the cold and flue (it has antibiotic type properties), and helping overcome retardation and other developmental problems in children. It is thought to protect against radiation and to have anti-cancer qualities.

Nutrient deficiencies and all the health problems they cause are recognized worldwide as a growing problem. Because bee pollen contains all the nutrients needed to sustain life, it is being used on an ever larger scale for human nourishment and health. Science teaches that bee pollen contains many substances that combine to make it a healthy, nutritious, complete food. There are numerous reports from medical experience that conclusively show the benefits of bee pollen exceed that of a simple food item. And the bees do most of the work.

Bee-gathered pollens are rich in proteins, free amino acids, vitamins, including B-complex, and folic acid.

According to researchers at the Institute of Apiculture, Taranov, Russia, "Honeybee pollen is the richest source of vitamins found in Nature in a single food. Even if bee pollen had none of its other vital ingredients, its content of rutin alone would justify taking at least a teaspoon daily, if for no other reason than strengthening the capillaries. Pollen is extremely rich in rutin and may have the highest content of any source, plus it provides a high content of the nucleics RNA [ribonucleic acid] and DNA [deoxyribonucleic acid]."

Bee pollen is a complete food and contains many elements that products of animal origin do not possess. Bee pollen is more rich in proteins than any animal source. It contains more amino acids than beef, eggs, or cheese of equal weight. Bee pollen is particularly concentrated in all elements necessary for life.
 
just do a goole search, A lot of info should come up

I first discovered Bee's pollen from Treating Yourself Magazine about 3 months ago, and because i was planning on starting to grow organic, i saw significance in what I was reading, so i started my research, which is no where near complete yet.

I have no doubt about the value of it to the plants, I am still working on the most benefical feeding schedule, method of delivery and dose. It is hard when you try to do things yourself with no real documentation to help. I am seeing very nice results from using the bee's pollen right now, and I am only really using it at about a teaspoon per gallon to supplement my other organics. Hopefully I should be able to post an enitre personally wrriten article very soon, but at this point i do not feel confident in recommending something that I don't truly understand, but i would love to see others experiement along with me, so that I have someone to compare notes with.
 
Dangit, now I want to get some bees too. lol I know that raw honey is very good for you, but I had never thought about the pollen.
 

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