Blackberry as a honey plant


Blackberry as a honey plant

Blackberries are often found in forests and plantations. Blackberries are loved by many, but also blackberries are honey plants and pollen plants, which bring many benefits to bees. We will talk about the features of blackberries as a honey plant in this article.

 

Content

  • Description of the honey plant blackberry
  • Where does blackberry grow as a honey plant?
  • Blackberry as a honey plant
  • Blackberry honey plant flowering period
  • Honey productivity of blackberries
  • Blackberry honey

 

 

Description of the honey plant blackberry


Gray blackberry Latin name Rubus caesius L. It is a perennial shrub from the Rosaceae family, 50-150 cm in height, with creeping, spiny shoots covered with a white coating.
Blackberry leaves are trifoliate, with rhombic-ovate leaves. The flowers are white, with many stamens and pistils, collected in thyroid racemes.

The fruits of blackberries are black with a bluish coating and collected drupes. For the sake of these fruits, blackberry honey plants are grown on plantations in many countries of the world, but most of all in North America and Australia; in Europe, large areas of blackberries are located in Serbia.

Where does blackberry grow as a honey plant?

Blackberry as a honey plant
Blackberries grow as honey plants in forest and forest-steppe zones; they can be found in clearings, forest edges, in sparse forests, and along river banks. In forests, blackberries are often an undergrowth honey plant along with other shrubs, such as bird cherry, rowan, buckthorn, raspberry, zoster, hawthorn, and currant. Blackberries often create impenetrable thickets over large areas.


The blackberry honey plant is also often found in the steppes where blackberries can be found in ravines, on river banks, in ravine forests, where blackberries as a honey plant are one of the important components of the honey base.
Blackberries, as honey plants, are often grown in gardens, where they, however, have not acquired the same importance as raspberries. This is partly due to the fact that blackberries have less winter hardiness, as well as large thorns.
In many countries, the honey plant blackberry is grown on large plantations, where blackberries are grown for their berries and where pollination of blackberries by bees is an important part of the cultivation practice.

How to pollinate blackberries with bees.

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Blackberry honey plants are often grown along fences to create thorny hedges and to secure slopes. The blackberry honey plant is relatively decorative, so some varieties are used for landscaping arbors.


Blackberry as a honey plant


Blackberries as a honey plant have earned a variety of reviews, so different that the question arises among many beekeepers: are blackberries a honey plant or not?
To the question whether blackberries are honey plants or not, one can answer in the affirmative, yes, blackberries are honey plants, but they have their own characteristics.
What are the benefits of blackberries for bees? Blackberries are honey bearers and pollen bearers, and this is their benefit for bees. Not only wild blackberries, but also blackberries grown on plantations, provide bees with a lot of nectar and pollen. The nectar in the blackberry flower is easily accessible to bees.

Blackberry honey plant flowering period

 

When does blackberry bloom as a honey plant? What is the flowering period of the blackberry honey plant?
Blackberries bloom as a honey plant in June-July; some claim that blackberries bloom from June to September. But the period of mass flowering is important for bees, so the flowering period of the blackberry honey plant, depending on the weather, ranges from 14 to 30 days.


Honey productivity of blackberries

 

How much honey do bees collect from blackberries? As a rule, blackberries are a secondary honey plant; the nectar that bees collect from blackberries, as a rule, goes to the development of families. But in some years, when the weather is favorable, the control hive can become heavier by up to 3 kg per day, and then the beekeeper can obtain commercial honey from blackberries. Blackberries produce nectar well in warm and humid weather, when it is warm and raining, blackberries bloom for a long time, up to 4 weeks.
If there is no rain and it is very hot, then nectar production decreases and the blackberry honey plant becomes more pollen-bearing. From blackberries, bees carry pollen that is rusty-gray or greenish in color.
In general, the honey productivity of blackberries per hectare of continuous thickets is 20-25 kg.


Blackberry honey


It is extremely rare for a beekeeper to boast of blackberry honey. Blackberry honey is light, transparent or light amber in color, pleasant to the taste. So there is no need to look for blackberry honey on the market.

 

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