For about the first five decades of my life, I loathed Chinese Tallow Trees. We also call them Chicken Trees. Why did I hate them? Because they are truly an invasive species. If not kept in check, they will turn a lovely pasture into a scrub brush forest before your very eyes. They encroach on the borders and outside levees of rice fields, suddenly turning a 50 acre field into a 47 acre field. Birds eat their seeds and then sit on fence rows. As a result of the bird poop propagation, Chinese tallow trees sprout up along these fence rows and before you know it, they've grown through the fence. These trees require constant clearing, hauling, and burning - non-stop labor. I wished we could eradicate them, make them as extinct as the dodo bird.
But then something changed. When we began beekeeping, my intense hatred for the Chicken tree evolved into vehement dislike. This spring I actually dug up two chicken tree seedlings growing in our flower beds and replanted them along the fence row bordering our neighbors in the back. Tricia could not believe it. Had someone abducted her husband and replaced him with an imposter?
As it turns out, the Chinese tallow tree is the primary producer of nectar in our area. It makes fantastic honey! The honeybees just love it. Each year at this time, the tallow trees tassel and flower. The bees are on it like white on rice and bring loads of nectar back to the hives. When I walked out to the bee boxes today there was SO much activity! Here is a shot of the Chinese tallow trees in bloom:
The flow is on! I wanted to see if the honeybees had found it yet. Within seconds, my question was answered. Bees were all over the place, moving from one flower to the next. They were moving so fast, it was hard to get a photo:
Now that the flow is on, we'll have to be diligent in making sure that we're adding honey supers on top so that the bees don't run out of room. That means we'll be donning the bee suits once a week, opening up the boxes and checking to see if we need to add supers on top. We have a little over a month until we're extracting honey. Hopefully, we'll have another good honey harvest. We're a land flowing with milk AND honey afterall.
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