Pop's Hives

Pop's Hives We're a small family apiary with a passion for bee education and making natural self-care cosmetics. www.popshives.com

06/04/2026

A Beekeeping Guide to Hive Success in the USA: East is Best! ☀️🐝
​Orienting your beehive is crucial for colony health and productivity. This infographic details why facing beehives East or South-East is standard practice across the United States to maximize honey production and support stronger, more resilient colonies.
​Key Benefits of East/South-East Orientation for American Beekeepers:
​Geometry & Sun Efficiency: The early morning sun hits the hive first, quickly warming it and encouraging early bee activity.
​Activity Boost & Foraging: Warmed bees stimulate early foraging behavior, maximizing productivity before other factors interfere.
​Humidity & Mold Prevention: Early sun helps evaporate morning dew and internal moisture, significantly reducing the risk of mold and bacterial growth.
​Wind Protection: Facing East/South-East protects the hive entrance from prevailing cold winds from the North and West, which are common in many US regions.
​Optimizing your apiary location can lead to significant gains. Does your American beekeeping strategy prioritize this rule?

05/30/2026
Busy day at Center Farm today. Matthew the horse was naughty, but Emma came down and straightened out his attitude. The ...
05/27/2026

Busy day at Center Farm today. Matthew the horse was naughty, but Emma came down and straightened out his attitude. The dogs kept their distance most of the day. It felt good to get dirty and get so much done. 🐝 One memory photo of a bear getting into things.

05/27/2026

All 8 hives survived the splits after my two-week vacation and look good. Three hives, likely the ones with the original queens, needed a new box of frames (a super) added to the top. They were all full of bees and lots of drones- which were produced for ONE thing only- to mate with a new queen!
After this video, we opened up all of the hive entrances a bit, but not fully open just yet. There are a lot of things in bloom now so we dont have to feed them. Added water feeders in the apiary and we will let them do their thing. ❤️

05/07/2026

You don't see it happen. The bee simply doesn't come back.

She's flown thousands of trips, visited tens of thousands of blooms, communicated in waggle dances on wax she helped build. And somewhere in those final hours, her wings begin to thin at the edges. The fraying is microscopic at first, then unmistakable. Flight becomes labor. The hive, once magnetic, fades as a destination.

What happens next isn't collapse. It's departure.

She leaves while she still has strength enough to choose. Not toward the hive entrance but away from it, toward the open field or garden edge. This isn't confusion. It's clarity. Her body knows what her colony needs, and it isn't her death inside their shared walls. Disease spreads in enclosed spaces. Pathogens thrive on warm bodies stacked in darkness. So she flies out, alone, and finds a stem or a petal to hold.

It's called hygienic behavior, though that term feels too clinical for what's actually unfolding. The bee is performing an act of service that costs her everything and asks nothing in return. She removes herself to protect the whole. By morning, she'll be motionless, gripping a flower she may have visited a hundred times before.

And here's the part that reframes the entire cycle: her body doesn't vanish. It decomposes right there, at the base of the bloom. Nitrogen, potassium, trace minerals, all the microscopic wealth she carried in her exoskeleton and tissues, break down into the soil. The roots pull it back up. The flower strengthens. The nectar sweetens. The next generation of bees feeds on what she became.

She spent her life moving pollen from bloom to bloom, stitching the garden together with flight. In her final rest, she reverses the flow. What she took from flowers, she gives back in full. Not as nectar or pollen, but as her own matter, returned to the ground that grew everything she ever touched.

Most gardeners never witness this exchange. We see the bees working, and we see the blooms thriving, but we miss the quiet handoff that happens in between. The worker bee who doesn't return isn't lost. She's completing the circle in the only way left to her.

It's a form of reciprocity so seamless it barely registers as intentional. And yet every choice she made in those last hours, leaving the hive, choosing the flower, gripping the petal through the cooling night, served something larger than survival. She became part of the soil that feeds the system she once flew through.

This is the hidden superpower no one talks about. Not the pollination, not the honey, not even the hum of wings in summer air. It's the way a single bee, worn past flight, still manages to give. The garden doesn't just rely on her labor. It absorbs her entirely. And in doing so, it makes room for the next worker to rise, to fly, to choose her own final flower when the time comes.

Nothing is wasted. Nothing is lost. Even the smallest life leaves the ground richer than it found it. [KKKEO]

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The Apiary Interstate In Berlin, NY. I Make The Skin Care Products In HF
Hoosick Falls, NY

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