Wednesday, February 29, 2012

School days, school days

School days, school days ! I went to school with Linda today. There are about five ladies that work in the volunteer room. They all were busily working today. I never figured on a mystery day, but was I ever surprised!!!!! The first thing I seen was a stack of pictures of children, cows, chickens and other animals. I wonder what these are for. Mae, one of the ladies said follow me and I will show you.





I followed her into the cafeteria and on this one wall was a beautiful farm scene on it. It was a kindergarten room picture. And guess what????? There were all those pictures I seen before.



I went back to the volunteer room and was looking at a poster about frogs and toads. Oh another mystery but this one was solved on the poster.




There is a laminating machine in the volunteer room we use. i was curious to see what was being laminated. The school has A Dr Suess day and we were laminating things for it.





The other ladies that work in the school with me do not like there pictures taken so here is there busy hands a working.


I have a mystery for you to solve. Mae worked on a window case with another farm scene in it---can you find me???????????????????????





Just in case you can't----HERE I AM1111111111111111111




I went over to the copier and I pushed for a copy to come through-nothing -what is the mystery to this machine I asked. Rose spoke up-you need a password-oh my that is an easy mystery to solve.





So a day with a couple mysteries already solved. I enjoyed my day at school. Linda says maybe next week i can go back with her. What fun my day was!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Agatha reporting.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Whats in the Box-Bee Box that is

Well we decided to go back out to the bees. This time Butch is carrying a smoker just in case the bees decide to buzz and attack. Inside the smoker is rags and we started a little fire in it-if the bees get to mean we just let out a little smoke and they calm down.




We open up the box to see all that is in it-woweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee........






Welllllllllllll that mystery is solved-right Butch ,yeahhhhhhhhhh butttttttttttt-oh my here comes another question I can feel it. How do the bees make the honey-what is involved, Butch asks. Well I thought my mystery with the bees was done but..... lets go the next mystery how do these wonderful little creatures God make--how do they make that delicous sweet honey???????


The Colony
Why do Bees Make Honey? Honeybees collect nectar and store it as honey in their hives. Nectar and honey provide the energy for the bees’ flight muscles and for heating the hive during the winter period. Honeybees also collect pollen which supplies protein for bee brood to grow.
Honey bees live in colonies that are often maintained, fed, and transported by beekeepers. Centuries of selective breeding by humans have created honey bees that produce far more honey than the colony needs. Beekeepers harvest the honey. Beekeepers provide a place for the colony to live and to store honey in. The modern beehive is made up of a series of square or rectangular boxes without tops or bottoms placed one on top of another. Inside the boxes, frames are hung in parallel, in which bees build up the wax honeycomb in which they both raise brood and store honey. Modern hives enable beekeepers to transport bees, moving from field to field as the crop needs pollinating and allowing the beekeeper to charge for the pollination services they provide.
A colony generally contains one breeding female, or “queen”; a few thousand males, or “drones”; and a large population of sterile female “worker” bees. The population of a healthy hive in mid-summer can average between 40,000 and 80,000 bees. The workers cooperate to find food and use a pattern of “dancing” to communicate with each other.



The Queen Bee
The queen is the largest bee in the colony. Queens are developed from larvae selected by worker bees to become sexually mature. The queen develops more fully than sexually immature workers because she is given royal jelly, a secretion from glands on the heads of young workers, for an extended time. She develops in a specially-constructed queen cell, which is larger than the cells of normal brood comb, and is oriented vertically instead of horizontally.
She will emerge from her cell to mate in flight with approximately 13-18 drone (male) bees. During this mating, she receives several million sperm cells, which last her entire life span (from two to five years). In each hive or colony, there is only one adult, mated queen, who is the mother of the worker bees of the hive, although there are exceptions on occasion.
Although the name might imply it, a queen has no control over the hive. Her sole function is to serve as the reproducer; she is an “egg laying machine.” A good queen of quality stock, well reared with good nutrition and well mated, can lay up to 3,000 eggs per day during the spring build-up and live for two or more years. She lays her own weight in eggs every couple of hours and is continuously surrounded by young worker attendants, who meet her every need, such as feeding and cleaning.




Drones
The male bees, called “drones”, are characterized by eyes that are twice the size of those of worker bees and queens, and a body size greater than that of worker bees, though usually smaller than the queen bee. Their abdomen is stouter than the abdomen of workers or queen. Although heavy bodied, drones have to be able to fly fast enough to catch up with the queen in flight. Drones are stingless.
Their main function in the hive is to be ready to fertilize a receptive queen. Mating occurs in flight, which accounts for the need of the drones for better vision, which is provided by their big eyes.
In areas with severe winters, all drones are then driven out of the hive. The life expectancy of a drone is about 90 days.





Worker Bees
A worker bee is a non-reproducing female which performs certain tasks in support of a bee hive. Worker bees undergo a well defined progression of capabilities. In the summer 98% of the bees in a hive are worker bees. In the winter, besides the queen, all bees are worker bees. Workers feed the queen and larvae, guard the hive entrance and help to keep the hive cool by fanning their wings. Worker bees also collect nectar to make honey. In addition, honey bees produce wax comb.

Worker Bees
A worker bee is a non-reproducing female which performs certain tasks in support of a bee hive. Worker bees undergo a well defined progression of capabilities. In the summer 98% of the bees in a hive are worker bees. In the winter, besides the queen, all bees are worker bees. Workers feed the queen and larvae, guard the hive entrance and help to keep the hive cool by fanning their wings. Worker bees also collect nectar to make honey. In addition, honey bees produce wax comb.







Honey: In the hive the bees use their honey stomachs to ingest and process the nectar a number of times. It is then stored in the honeycomb. Nectar is high in both water content and natural yeasts which, unchecked, would cause the sugars in the nectar to ferment. After the final regurgitation, the honeycomb is left unsealed - bees inside the hive “fan” their wings creating a strong draft across the honeycomb. This enhances evaporation of much of the water from the nectar. The reduction in water content, which raises the sugar concentration, prevents fermentation. Ripe honey, as removed from the hive by the beekeeper, has a long shelf life and will not ferment.
Beeswax: Worker bees of a certain age will secrete beeswax from a series of glands on their abdomen. They use the wax to form the walls and caps of the comb. When honey is harvested, the wax can be gathered to be used in various wax products like candles and seals.
Pollen: Bees collect pollen in the pollen basket (a concave area on the hind legs of the bee with special hairs to hold the pollen in place) and carry it back to the hive. In the hive, pollen is used as a protein source necessary during brood-rearing. In certain environments, excess pollen can be collected from the hive. It is often eaten as a health supplement.
Propolis: Propolis (or bee glue) is created from resins, balsams and tree saps. Honeybees use propolis to seal cracks in the hive.
Honey Bee Products
Of course, honey is the main honey bee product that we are interested in here at the National Honey Board! In addition, there are a few other products of the hive that are also extremely important.
Honey: In the hive the bees use their honey stomachs to ingest and process the nectar a number of times. It is then stored in the honeycomb. Nectar is high in both water content and natural yeasts which, unchecked, would cause the sugars in the nectar to ferment. After the final regurgitation, the honeycomb is left unsealed - bees inside the hive “fan” their wings creating a strong draft across the honeycomb. This enhances evaporation of much of the water from the nectar. The reduction in water content, which raises the sugar concentration, prevents fermentation. Ripe honey, as removed from the hive by the beekeeper, has a long shelf life and will not ferment.
Beeswax: Worker bees of a certain age will secrete beeswax from a series of glands on their abdomen. They use the wax to form the walls and caps of the comb. When honey is harvested, the wax can be gathered to be used in various wax products like candles and seals.
Pollen: Bees collect pollen in the pollen basket (a concave area on the hind legs of the bee with special hairs to hold the pollen in place) and carry it back to the hive. In the hive, pollen is used as a protein source necessary during brood-rearing. In certain environments, excess pollen can be collected from the hive. It is often eaten as a health supplement.
Propolis: Propolis (or bee glue) is created from resins, balsams and tree saps. Honeybees use propolis to seal cracks in the hive.
This is how the honeycomb is cut and then it is renedered by putting in a strainer and the honey is released from the honeycomb.


Honey Trivia
We are pleased to present a whole bunch of trivia in regard to honey! You can truly amaze your teachers, friends, and co-workers with these important facts.
How many flowers must honey bees tap to make one pound of honey?
About two million flowers, give or take.
How far does a hive of bees fly to bring you one pound of honey?
More than 55,000 miles.
How much honey does the average worker honey bee make in her lifetime?
About 1/12 of a teaspoon.
How fast does a honey bee fly?
About 15 miles per hour.
How much honey would it take to fuel a bee’s flight around the world?
About one ounce (or two Tablespoons); no carry-on luggage is allowed!
What is mead?
Mead is wine made from honey.
How many sides does each honeycomb cell have?
Each cell is a six-sided hexagon.
What is the U.S. per capita consumption of honey?
On average, each person consumes about 1.3 pounds per year.
What state is known as the beehive state?
Utah.
How many wings does a honey bee have?
Each honey bee has four wings.
How many beekeepers are there in the United States?
USDA has estimated that there are between 139,600 and 212,000 beekeepers in the United States. Most are hobbyists with less than 25 hives.
How many honey-producing colonies of bees are there in the United States?
The USDA estimates that there are approximately 2.68 million honey producing colonies in the United States. This estimate is based on beekeepers who managed five or more colonies in 2010.
How many flowers does a honey bee visit during one collection trip?
A worker bee visits about 50-100 flowers during each trip.
How do honey bees "communicate" with one another?
They communicate by "dancing." Honey bees do a dance which alerts other bees where nectar and pollen are located. The dance explains direction and distance. Bees also communicate with pheromones, a unique odor common to the particular beehive.
What does "super" mean to a beekeeper?
Supers are the hive boxes in which honey is stored, usually placed above the deeper box called the "hive body", where brood is reared.
Agatha and Butch about ready to taste the end product-HONEY....................


Another mystery solved-oh my what a busy dayzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzGoodnight everyone.

The mystery of what is in the box is solved and how the honey is made. Hitty Agatha will take a bee box home with her along with a hat to tend to them. I hope the forever home will accept the gifts too.





Signing off till next mystery............................

Mystery getting started

I am helping Butch solve a mystery he has been wondering about for a long time. He sees the bee boxes in the back all lined up. He wonders what happens in them. On different occasions he has been out there and seen bees flying in front of it. But never has he seen inside the box. I had the person Linda get a book from the library that might help us to understand it.





We took a walk out back so Butch could show me what the boxes look like.





We decided to venture up to the boxes to get a closer look. But we had to be careful cause bees stinggggggggggggggggg.




We decided we needed a closer look so we moved up closer................................





Oh my buzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz is all we are hearing maybe we need to move a tad away oh my buzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz lets go Butch....................Oh my our hats popping off our heads-good thing the net is holding so the bees cannot sting-bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.....



All for now
Your most blessed Agatha and Butch back at the house no stings.............

Friday, February 24, 2012

Hitty Agatha in Flintstone

Well I could fill my box being moved. A chill came over me as I figured I was being taken outside. I could fill something hitting the box maybe rain. Oh my now am being put down and could fill something being set on me-it was not heavy. I am here for a time not sure how long. Then I can fill being lifted up and could hear a door open and plop I am set down. It is warm here . All of a sudden I can feel my box being opened. I can hear voices-lots of voices. Where am I , I wonder, am I in Flintstone? Is that some of the Yabba Dabba Doo Hittys I hear.I hear one saying It has HITTY written on the box.




Then I hear AGATHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA are you in there? Yes I ammmmmmmmmmmmm help me out please.



Oh my I am carefully unwrapped and I see a most welcoming Welcome Bunch. Hi, I am Butch, Hi I am Laura, Hi, I am Steffie and then I see a hand reaching out for me and saying ok everyone let her get her breath we can all meet later. Hitty Gerty helps me out.



I get my breath and go to the front door of a big house where I am greeted again by Becassine and Becassine Tina. Welcome Agatha we are so happy to have you in Flintstone.



So many wonderful Hittys and friends to help me solve the mystery of........................well later we will tell you

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Goodbye Agatha from The Country Hittys

By the time you read this dear friends I will have boarded the postal bus and be on my way
to Maryland. I am so excited about this leg of my journey. I have been told by the Country
Hittys that I will be welcomed into a very large Hitty establishment. These dear little country
Hittys seem quite in awe of the splendor and size of the Hitty family that awaits me. I shall
endeavor to take some nice long naps enroute so that I might arrive rested and refreshed, ready to meet
any new adventures!
The last view I had of the Country Hittys was as their person was carrying
me away to my traveling accommodations. The girls were all waving and urging me to return soon.





Aren't they a charming little group?

p.s. I have been told that Hetty is under house arrest by Sheriff Wally. I fear that she will soon
escape custody!!!

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Hitty Noel and dollies

It is nearing the end of my stay with the Country Hittys. I have been packing my bags in preparation for my
departure. I was busily folding and sorting when a small delagation of Hittys came to ask my help. They
asked if I might spend a bit of time with their Hitty Noel. I believe I mentioned her earlier. She was the
one who was so taken with the cradle and dolly that I have with me. Pleasant reminders of my childhood
that will accompany to my eventual permanent home. At any rate I of course agreed to the request to
visit with Noel. It seems that my earlier observation was correct. Noel is quite "young". She is shy and
most happy at home among her sisters.
She is much cosseted by them and is a gentle little soul. She has a large collection of dollies which she was
eager to share with me.











We had a lovely afternoon examining her collection.
Tomorrow I shall finish my packing and bid all a fond farewell.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Next mystery.......................Agatha meets Hetty

While I was being fitted for my apron and bonnet I asked the Hittys if their dogs were guard dogs or just
companions. They told me that their German Shepherds were members of the family but also they helped
the Hittys with their flock of sheep-lets! Aha I thought to myself that is why Hetty wanted those puppies!! The
babies were in no danger of being made into puppy pies by Hetty they were going to be raised to herd a flock.
But Hetty did not have any sheeplets according to my hosts. I immediately ran to find Sheriff Wally. I knew where
Hetty was going to find her flock!!





From a distance Wally and I spotted the flock and was that a wagon?? With someone loading
sheeplets into it???




Could this be the nefarious Hetty??!!! Was I finally to meet this terror
of the countryside?? Would I survive the meeting???!!!

We advanced upon her. Wally had his gun drawn and I was right there....ready to make the arrest!!



Finally I meet the terrible Hetty face to face.




Wally is there to insure my safety. Hetty has
a rather smirking little smile. She asks my name and when I tell her she congratulates me
on my remarkable detecting skills. She is a strange one this Hetty. I feel that the Hittys
here in Mo. will never really be secure from her misdeeds. Even with Sheriff Wally trying
to keep them all safe. However Wally and the Hittys assure me that all has ended well
with my able assistance. The puppies are restored to their rightful home, the sheep have
been herded back to the corral. All is well that ends well here on the farm.


HOw exciting to see the result of my deductive reasoning!!


The Hittys are so pleased that the sheeplets are safe. They insist that I pick out a sheeplet to take on
my future journeys....??!!!!




Oh my, I can only hope that my future hostesses are not as appalled as
I am at the thought of arriving in their homes with livestock!!!

Monday, February 13, 2012

Missing puppies continued..........

On the trail of the missing puppies I consult with a witness to the strange person seen pushing
a pram across the field.



The witness is quite adamant as to the direction taken. I shall go fetch
one of the Hittys to accompany me.

Hitty Anne eagerly agrees to accompany me. We decide that the parents of the missing puppies might
aid us in our tracking efforts.



They are willing and biddable canines. We are off!! I am sure we are
on the right path.


Hettys Hideaway!!! We are successful!! We have discovered the rural retreat of the infamous Hetty
Hickory. And inside are the precious missing puppies!




They have been well cared for but our most
happy to be reunited with their parents. Hitty Anne is overjoyed to see them. Sheriff Wally is also
pleased and even more pleased with me! I have discovered not only the missing puppies but also
the MISSING BONNETS!!!



We pack up the bonnets for their return to the rightful owners....




the Hittys! Oh the satisfaction
I feel concerning this "double whammy!"


I thought you might enjoy another picture of the puppies and their parents.
It does bring a tear to the eye.








The Hittys are so thrilled with the return of their pets and their bonnets that they insist upon
making me a new bonnet and apron. They assure me that ALL country Hittys must have aprons
and bonnets. They search their supplies to find a nice lilac that will go with my frocks. I am
very pleased with their efforts.







They really are quite dear.

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Agatha here......................Meeting Sheriff Wally...

Dear Friends,
Just a quick note to let you all know I am well and safe
so far. I am off this morning to meet with Sheriff Wally.
I am in hopes he will be able to provide me with additional
clues concerning this puppy napping incident. I do have
some theories. Ta ta for now, I will be contacting you all
later today.
Agatha



Finally I meet the famous Sheriff Wally. My, my..as they say in Tulsa he certainly is a
tall drink of water!!!







He was very helpful but I fear he may be a trifle naive concerning
just how crafty this Hetty may be. He says that she is "trifle cantankerous". I can hardly
wait to meet her face to face!! The good sheriff did promise to provide any all support
that law enforcement could provide in solving the Pupppy napping!


As I was preparing to leave the Sheriff mentioned that someone had seen a "lady" pushing a buggy
out across the field.





Chilly weather to be taking the air with babies he thought. I asked if it could
be Htty and he laughed aloud!!! "Why of course not, that Hetty is shore not the mothering type".
But could it have been her? and if so ...what was in that buggy?!



GASP!!!! Dear readers, this is a glimpse into that buggy. OH the poor little dears!!






Agatha has not seen this but she has her suspicions and surely she will uncover the
dreadful plot before it is....................too late.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Where is she??????????????????

several of the country Hittys pry open the box and search franticallly for Agatha..."where is she?"
"helloooo are you in here??"



I can hear her...she is in this box...in here.




Lets get the lid off, hurry, hurry!!!! She wants out!!!


Agatha is led off to join the HIttys in their living rooom.


I meet most of the Country Hittys, my they are quite an animated group.



They want to know all about the
city where I come from. How tall are the buildings and how big were those Asian lions?? Little Hitty Noel
is very relieved to learn they were made of stone.

I showed the girls my doll and her cradle.







They were all quite impressed but it was Hitty Noel that
could not wait to hold her.





Noel told me all about her dollies. She seems very sweet and very
young. I notice that the other Hittys baby her. I am quite busy making keen obversations of my
hosts.
Cousin Ida who seems to be a combination of den mother and house keeper has ordered all the Hittys
off to play so that she and I can have a little chat. Ida is quite informative and very alert. She cautions
me that "someone" is peering around my chair and trying to eaves drop on our conversation.



I believe
this to be the notorious Hetty Hickory. I take careful note of her beady little eyes they show an alert
mind and since she is creeeping about a very devious nature. Just as I had been warned.
Cousin Ida has kindly left me alone to ponder on the facts of this case. I made careful notes
and will spend some time studying them.





I believe that tomorrow I will meet with the local
constable...a Sheriff Wally and see what can be done to solve this case,and I am determined
that it will be solved.


Cousin Ida summons Hitty Edith to explain to me one of their problems...a mystery of great
importance to my new friends. The Hittys have a dog rescue...German Shepherd dogs. And
very recently they have "lost" 2 of the youngest puppies. This has caused great distress for
the girls and for the older dogs. It appears that the dogs went missing during a sheep stampede
did I mention the HIttys have a small flock of sheep? The stampede was very mysterious. The
older dogs all rushed to assist in the round up, upon their return the puppies were discovered to
be missing from their little pen. The consensus is that Hetty had something (if not everything!) do
do with the stampede and the puppy napping. But where would she put two very active puppies???




I must ponder this carefully.