
Summer
The early summer flow starts with Black Locust trees. Their drooping clusters of
white flowers don't produce every year, but when they do they hum with bees, and
yield a water white honey of heavy body and mild flavor. Beehives in some locales
can also put in a sizable crop of honey at this time from both Wild Blackberry and
Raspberry bushes. It is a superior honey and, like locust, very light-
The main event for many beekeepers begins in mid-
Probably the most identifiable clover is White Dutch. Most people have seen bees working in its small, low growing flowers on their lawns or in pastures. Alsike, the queen of clovers, is a major component of good hay. Tallish, with large white heads tinged with pink, it thrives in sweet clay soils like those found in the Champlain Valley. Some beekeepers have estimated that an acre of Alsike will produce 500 pounds of honey in a good season. The nectar of red clover, the state flower, is ironically not available to honeybees. Their tongues are too short to reach the nectar at the base of the flowers. Bee breeders have actually been trying for years to develop a long tongued honeybee that can work red clover, as bumblebees can. The frenzy of the clover flow has usually subsided in the bee yard by the Fourth of July, when the first cut of hay is down and in the barns, and by this time the better part of a hive's surplus may have been made.
Honey from the beautiful Basswood tree is next. A six-
Summer