litespeed
02-26-2006, 05:01 AM
I came home this even and in my Grow room there are about 3000++ bees all over the plants and have started a hive, the size of the ball of them, is about the size of a basketball.:( I'm going to try to move them out... or maybe a hive and keep them in there...
http://leda.lycaeum.org/?ID=16834
:thumbsup:
Jonathan Ott
Economic Botany 52(3):260 -266,1998.
Herein a brief review, with 49 references, of the history and phytochemistry of toxic honeys, in which bees have sequestered secondary compounds naturally occurring in plant nectars (floral and extrafloral). It is hypothesised that such toxic honeys could have served as pointers to psychoactive and other medicinal plants for human beings exploring novel ecosystems, :D :) causing such plants to stand out, even against a background of extreme biodiversity. After reviewing various ethnomedicinal uses of toxic honeys, the author suggests that pre-Columbian Yucatecan Mayans intentionally produced a psychactive honey from the shamanic inebriant Turbin corymbosa as a visionary substrate for manufacture of their ritual metheglin, balché.
http://leda.lycaeum.org/?ID=16834
:thumbsup:
Jonathan Ott
Economic Botany 52(3):260 -266,1998.
Herein a brief review, with 49 references, of the history and phytochemistry of toxic honeys, in which bees have sequestered secondary compounds naturally occurring in plant nectars (floral and extrafloral). It is hypothesised that such toxic honeys could have served as pointers to psychoactive and other medicinal plants for human beings exploring novel ecosystems, :D :) causing such plants to stand out, even against a background of extreme biodiversity. After reviewing various ethnomedicinal uses of toxic honeys, the author suggests that pre-Columbian Yucatecan Mayans intentionally produced a psychactive honey from the shamanic inebriant Turbin corymbosa as a visionary substrate for manufacture of their ritual metheglin, balché.