Prøve GULL - Gratis
PROPOLIS: Nature's little miracle
go! Platteland
|Spring 2025
Bees not only provide us with honey and wax, they also produce a third, powerful substance that humans have used for thousands of years. Yet, it's only recently that propolis has buzzed back into the spotlight.
-

For many centuries, the humble worker bee has distinguished herself as probably the most important species on earth. She and her hardworking sisters are responsible for the pollination - and therefore reproduction - of almost all plants on earth. According to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), without them, we would have at least a third less food. And we're not only talking about vegans here; carnivores would also be deprived, because most animal feed is also pollinated by bees.
Yet, even in the modern era, most people still see these humble miracle workers as a threat, a gang of buzzing kamikaze attackers that deserve to be eradicated, often with nothing more than a can of Doom. Of course, these people are only thinking of the sting that pierces the skin and causes serious pain; they forget all about our food and the two products that we can't imagine living without: honey and wax.
But bees also manufacture a third product, a resinous substance that's as old as the hills, but which has only been rediscovered in South Africa in the last few years: propolis, also known as “bee glue”.

Propolis is a hard resinous substance that honey bees produce by mixing their saliva (and the enzymes it contains) with pollen, beeswax and the sap and resin from various plants. The most important function of propolis is to protect the hive and facilitate disinfection and homeostasis; the worker bees use it to fill cracks, strengthen the structure, control airflow and protect the colony against pathogens and intruders. Some sources say it is the cement and immune system of the bees' home.
Denne historien er fra Spring 2025-utgaven av go! Platteland.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA go! Platteland

go! Platteland
He was just called 'P'
Book discussions are usually well attended in the platteland, but when a little old “P” causes a case of mistaken identity, it’s a story worth telling, says Nadine Petrick.
5 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
A last refuge at the Gamsberg
A network of historical paths had to intersect before award-winning Afrikaans author and poet Piet van Rooyen and his wife, Annalie, put down roots at the Gamsberg in Namibia five years ago.
8 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
Cooking with gas!
Celebrate spring – and Braai Day – with friends and family preparing and braaiing lamb sosaties or ribeye steak with an assortment of delicious vegetables. In his award winning book Food Trail South Africa, Warren Mendes spices things up with daring combinations. Here's a taste...
8 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
Refuge of silence
When writer Zelda Nel Bezuidenhout and her husband, Izak, stumbled upon Skuilkrans Private Nature Reserve just outside McGregor, they knew they'd found it: the off-grid, eco-conscious, pet-friendly, writing and getaway retreat they'd long imagined.
6 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
RIETBRON Wellspring of life
There's never been an abundance of people and businesses in Rietbron. But what you will find in abundance, aside from water, in this little town located in Die Vlak in the Great Karoo is blissful tranquillity. Just walk its dusty streets and you'll feel it...
9 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
Start your own cut-flower garden
Even if you think you don't have green fingers, you can cultivate your own flowers for picking – and save a lot of money in the long run. Follow our expert advice on how to start your own cut-flower garden this spring. All you need is one small bed (or four to six large pots).
7 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
Cherry picking in the Free State
Spring at the Ionia Cherry Farm between Fouriesburg and Ficksburg is a season of promise, according to one of the directors, Frieda Kruger. “The whole world around us is in bloom and the air smells like fresh beginnings – it’s like a fairytale!”
2 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
New tricks for old (and young) dogs
Dogs and their owners can make the most of the longer days by signing up for a new team-building adventure.
2 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
PROPOLIS: Nature's little miracle
Bees not only provide us with honey and wax, they also produce a third, powerful substance that humans have used for thousands of years. Yet, it's only recently that propolis has buzzed back into the spotlight.
7 mins
Spring 2025

go! Platteland
A perfect lookout
Macadamia and game farms, food gardens, horses... The blissful peace of the Uitkyk area, a stone's throw from Mpumalanga's capital, Mbombela, is why many former city slickers have carved out a new life for themselves here.
15 mins
Spring 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size