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Photograph Information Photographer's Comments
Challenge: Free Study 2020-04 (Standard Editing)
Collection: 2020 - CHALLENGES & outtakes etc
Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M1 Mark III
Lens: Olympus M.Zuiko Digital ED 60mm 1:2.8 Macro
Location: on a flower in my 'garden'
Date: Apr 12, 2020
Aperture: 5.0
ISO: 100
Shutter: 1/320 +extFlash
Galleries: Macro, Insects, etc
Date Uploaded: Apr 7, 2020

some interesting stuff i found out about bees ..

Honey bees must gather nectar from two million flowers to make one pound of honey.

One bee has to fly about 90,000 miles – three times around the globe – to make one pound of honey.

The average bee will make only 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey in its lifetime.

A honey bee visits 50 to 100 flowers during a collection trip.

A honey bee can fly for up to six miles, and as fast as 15 miles per hour.

The bee’s brain is oval in shape and about the size of a sesame seed, yet it has a remarkable capacity to learn and remember things. For example, it is able to make complex calculations on distance travelled and foraging efficiency.

Honey bees communicate with one another by dancing.

A colony of bees consists of 20,000-60,000 honey bees and one queen.

Worker honey bees are female, live for about 6 weeks and do all the work.

The queen bee can live up to 5 years and is the only bee that lays eggs. She is the busiest in the summer months, when the hive needs to be at its maximum strength, and lays up to 2500 eggs per day.

Larger than the worker bees, the male honey bees (also called drones), have no stinger and do no work. All they do is mate.

Honey has always been highly regarded as a medicine. It is thought to help with everything from sore throats and digestive disorders to skin problems and hay fever.

Honey has antiseptic properties and was historically used as a dressing for wounds and a first aid treatment for burns and cuts.

The natural fruit sugars in honey – fructose and glucose – are quickly digested by the body. This is why sportsmen and athletes use honey to give them a natural energy boost.

Honey bees have been producing honey in the same way for 150 million years.

The honey bee is the only insect that produces food eaten by man.

Honey lasts an incredibly long time. An explorer who found a 2000 year old jar of honey in an Egyptian tomb said it tasted delicious!

The bees’ buzz is the sound made by their wings which beat 11,400 times per minute.

When a bee finds a good source of nectar it flies back to the hive and shows its friends where the nectar source is by doing a dance which positions the flower in relation to the sun and hive. This is known as the ‘waggle dance.’

Honey’s ability to attract and retain moisture means that it has long been used as a beauty treatment. It was part of Cleopatra’s daily beauty ritual.

Honey is incredibly healthy and includes enzymes, vitamins, minerals. It’s the only food that contains “pinocembrin”, an antioxidant associated with improved brain functioning

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Place: 12 out of 62
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Views since voting: 300
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Votes: 59
Comments: 3
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AuthorThread
05/09/2020 03:03:45 PM
Originally posted by tvsometime:

Remarkable and beautiful shot. The wonder is how did you do it with that camera setup?

thankyou so much Tom .. i find this photo so much more appealing than my recent 2nd place in the off-centre challenge .. and a much much harder shot to get .. but maybe the voters are over bees ..
anyway .. i use an external flash .. and take a lot of shots .. altho this particular bee did move around a lot .. doing various things on that flower for maybe 4 or 5 seconds .. i was lucky i got the parts i wanted in focus .. as i haven't shot bees for a very long time .. was just a fluke .. the shot .. and that i went out to a bush that had a few last flowers before autumn .. those flowers are all gone now .. its coming into winter here in australia ..
there is certainly an art to getting macro shots of insects .. i think you've got to have a certain appreciation of them .. and consideration .. never hurting or otherwise causing them pain or discomfort .. which is why all my photos are taken in nature .. they do their thing and i do mine .. sorta .. !! ..
but also there's knowing about them as well .. studying the way they interact with their environment etc ..
like they are often easier to shoot in the early morning as they are more dopey .. and more likely to stay for a couple of shots .. but thats not always the case .. this shot was taken in the afternoon ..
anyway .. thankyou again .. for your comment .. very appreciated .. :)
05/08/2020 06:11:21 PM
Remarkable and beautiful shot. The wonder is how did you do it with that camera setup?
  Photographer found comment helpful.
 Comments Made During the Challenge
05/07/2020 07:24:31 AM
NICE detail! Perfect DOF.
  Photographer found comment helpful.


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