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Bee-ComingRarer
                  (silk hanging)
 Honeybees—Bunny Bowen When I was eleven, I chose to study the honeybee for my first Science Fair  project. As I was more of an artist than a scientist, my project ended up being  more of a report than an experiment. I carved an eight-inch long worker  honeybee out of balsa wood, with eisenglass wings... I think maybe I carved the  legs from balsa too.
 By age twenty-four I was carving and building wax models for cast silver  jewelry. We also used various wax mixtures for injection into rubber molds in  the lost wax casting technique.
 
 At thirty-five I learned still another use for beeswax: batik, the medium which  has occupied my creative energies ever since. Typically I've purchased beeswax  from bee keepers, who sell it in varying levels of purity. To prepare it for  batik I usually had to heat it in frypans in the yard and strain it through  nylon mesh stretched over embroidery hoops. This removed most of the bee body  parts, the honey, and dirt.
 
 After nearly four decades of depending upon bees for my artwork, I welcomed the  opportunity to actually watch a beekeeper take apart and check his top bar  hive. He made sure I was fitted with gloves, mesh netting over a wide brimmed  hat, and a light colored shirt. He had a smoker going as he carefully removed  the top cover to reveal the horizontal wooden bars upon which the bees build  the comb.
 
 One by one, the bars were gently lifted and inspected. The comb was built down  from the bars, and was covered with workers steadily going about their jobs.  Some bees flew in laden with yellow pollen, while others had found dark  red-orange pollen. The domed cells held drones, while the cells with flat  covers held workers. A few bees danced, conveying information about where they  had found flowers, while guard bees warned us to stay away.
 
 Throughout the whole procedure, nobody got stung. Pretty amazing, since each  bar was taken out and held up in the daylight. We never spotted the queen,  though it was obvious that she was laying eggs and the colony was healthy.
 
 
  When I realized how many bees it must take to make a spoonful of honey or a  pound of wax, I decided to take extra care with the flowers I plant... no  insecticides ever, and choosing plants that are good pollen-producers. 
 After all, they've given me a lifetime of fruit and veggies thanks to being  pollinators, as well as honey. And they've provided many pounds of wax for my  batik.
 
 It's the least one can do.
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