Norfolk Botanical Garden to host 7th annual Honey Bee Festival
Pleaase subscribe our channel
http://www.dailymotion.com/balajivfxrsnr
Pandit Rohit Sharma
con. 09815214027, 09549022500
GRAPHICS HINDI TUTORIAL
PANKAJ SHARMA
RAISINGHNAGAR
SRI GANGANGAR RAJASHTAN
09680299102
In this channel you can learn cricket from basic to advance. You can see astrology and vstu tisp video in hindi. In this channel you can watch trending news about sports, entertainment, tech, knowledge, dharma, gyan, vast and astro.
The grain is shaping up as a delicious staple for bees, those vital pollinators who love its nectar and pollen.
Red-Laird, an Ashland native who runs a nonprofit called “Bee Girl,” houses her hives on East Nevada Street near Ashland and is growing a hardy, organic strain of buckwheat that can help bees thrive, as well as be used as a model for local farmers and be marketed as grain.
Working with Oregon State University and Washington State University, Red-Laird is using her “Buckwheat for Bees” program to find the best strains to replace the bee-friendly hay, alfalfa, cow pasture, clover and flowers that are being lost to wine grapes and cannabis.
This shift means less habitat for bees, which are essential to plant health and the entire food chain.
“The trend is a big problem,” she says. “We could have a bee habitat that’s completely obliterated. We’re in phase one of finding the best buckwheat and getting farmers growing it.”
Norfolk Botanical Garden and the Beekeepers Guild of Southeast Virginia will hose the 7th annual Virginia Honey Bee Festifal from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Learn more about the critical role of bees and find out how you can help protect them.
Pleaase subscribe our channel
http://www.dailymotion.com/balajivfxrsnr
Pandit Rohit Sharma
con. 09815214027, 09549022500
GRAPHICS HINDI TUTORIAL
PANKAJ SHARMA
RAISINGHNAGAR
SRI GANGANGAR RAJASHTAN
09680299102
In this channel you can learn cricket from basic to advance. You can see astrology and vstu tisp video in hindi. In this channel you can watch trending news about sports, entertainment, tech, knowledge, dharma, gyan, vast and astro.
The grain is shaping up as a delicious staple for bees, those vital pollinators who love its nectar and pollen.
Red-Laird, an Ashland native who runs a nonprofit called “Bee Girl,” houses her hives on East Nevada Street near Ashland and is growing a hardy, organic strain of buckwheat that can help bees thrive, as well as be used as a model for local farmers and be marketed as grain.
Working with Oregon State University and Washington State University, Red-Laird is using her “Buckwheat for Bees” program to find the best strains to replace the bee-friendly hay, alfalfa, cow pasture, clover and flowers that are being lost to wine grapes and cannabis.
This shift means less habitat for bees, which are essential to plant health and the entire food chain.
“The trend is a big problem,” she says. “We could have a bee habitat that’s completely obliterated. We’re in phase one of finding the best buckwheat and getting farmers growing it.”
Norfolk Botanical Garden and the Beekeepers Guild of Southeast Virginia will hose the 7th annual Virginia Honey Bee Festifal from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Learn more about the critical role of bees and find out how you can help protect them.
Category
🗞
News