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Hi there! If you’re a kid
and you don't think bee barf sounds like something you want eat, then this video is for you!
[tiny barfing noise]
Ewww.
Hi it’s Emily from Bite Size Vegan and welcome to another vegan nugget. I’m so excited
to be making another video just for you. So far in my videos for kids we’ve talked about
why we don’t drink milk, or eat meat or eggs, and heard from real vegan kids about
why they don’t and all the tasty foods they eat instead, and even talked about how you
can be a superhero for the planet, the people and the animals by being vegan. You can watch
all of those videos later if you want linked there and in the video description.
Now just like in my other videos I promise that I’ll tell you the truth no matter what
and that I won’t talk down to you, cause you’re pretty smart!
If you don’t know already, being vegan means you don’t eat animals or anything that comes
out of them like milk, eggs, cheese and, as we’ll learn today, honey.
So what’s wrong with honey? Well today we’re going to talk about how honey is made, which
is pretty gross, why taking it from the bees who make it isn’t good for them, and why
farming bees isn’t good for the environment.
Let’s start with how honey is made. You probably already know that honey comes from
bees. But even most adults don’t know exactly how it is that bees make honey. Well bees
fly out to flowers and suck the nectar from the flowers with this long tongue-like thing
called a proboscis. They keep the honey in their honey stomach or crop, because unlike
us they have two stomachs and then when they get back to the hive, they barf. What’s
even grosser is they barf into the mouth of another bee. Then the bees keep barfing the
honey back and forth between each other until they finally spit it into their hive for safekeeping.
Now this sounds pretty gross to you and me and certainly not something I want to be eating.
But for bees, making and eating honey is totally natural and quite tasty. And honestly, it’s
pretty awesome to see the incredible things other animals do, and the making of honey
is pretty darn incredible!
Each bee visits 50 to 100 flowers to fill their honey stomachs. To make just one pound
of honey, bees from the hive have to visit two million flowers and fly 55,000 miles.
That’s farther than going around the whole world twice! Bees really are incredible!
In fact, to tell other bees where the good flowers are, bees will come back to the hive
and do what’s called a waggle dance, where they shake their *** around and just by
watching what direction the bee is waggling in and for how long, other bees know where to
find the flowers. It’s all based on some pretty incredible math and some pretty incredible
*** action. I haven’t gotten it down yet.
This brings me to the second part about why vegans don’t eat honey. Farming bees isn’t
good for them and taking their honey away, which is their food and the food they feed
to their little bee babies, certainly isn’t good for them. Bees need their honey to survive.
They do all of the hard work, literally flying around the world two times over to make food
for themselves and their families and then we humans step in and take it to put it on
our breakfast cereals and cinnamon buns. That’s not very fair if you ask me.
Honey farming also hurts bees. Bees, like other animals and like us, can feel pain.
And just like we talked about in our videos about meat, milk and eggs, it doesn’t make
sense to hurt anyone who can feel pain.
For a beehive to work they need a queen bee, kind of the big bossy momma bee who runs the
show. Now this is part is kind of sad, but beekeepers have their queen bees and even
their whole bee colonies shipped to them in the mail. The bees can be injured and even
killed while being shipped and when the queen arrive the beekeepers often tear off her wings
so that she won’t fly away.
The queen is also forced to be pregnant by what’s called insemination, which is a big
word and a pretty awful thing for the queen. She’s stuck in a tube where she can’t
move and poked and prodded.
In the winter, beekeepers often kill the entire hives, which can be anywhere between 20,000
to 80,000 bees. You may wonder why they do this. Well, like a lot of other weird things
adults do, it’s because of money.
Now the last thing we’re going to talk about is how farming bees isn’t good for the environment.
You may hear that we need bees to have food and that’s true. With all the flying from
flower to flower that they do, bees are doing something called pollinating, meaning helping
plants make more plants.
But honeybees aren’t the best pollinators. Other types of bees and insects do a much
better job. Honeybees aren’t even supposed to be in North America, the continent I live
on, and because humans have brought them here, the other bees that lived here first and other
insects that pollinate, have been kicked out and even died from diseases the honeybees
brought with them. We do need bees in order to have our own food, but we need native bees
and native pollinators to do their work, not the honeybees.
All in all, honey’s kind of a hot mess. It’s barfed, chewed, swallowed and re-barfed
by bees, taking it from the bees is super mean because it’s their food they worked
really hard to make for themselves and their families, beekeepers harm and even kill bees
in order to farm the honey, and it’s not good for other bee species or the environment.
So maybe we should just leave honey to the bees, shall we?
But there’s good news. If you really love the sweet taste of honey, there are other things
you can have instead. You can use something called agave nectar, coconut nectar, make
your own date paste, or use a vegan honey substitute. I have links to all of those and
other resources on the blog post for this video, which you can find linked up there
and in the description below. And when you don’t eat honey, you help bees everywhere
feed their little bee babies, and that’s pretty cool.
I hope this video was helpful. Let me know what you thought of the video in the comments
and if you have other things you’d like me to cover, feel free to tell me!
If you liked this video, do give it a thumbs up and share it around to help other kids
learn the truth. If you’re new here, do hit that big red subscribe button down there
for more awesome vegan content every Monday, Wednesday, and some Fridays and to not miss
out the on the rest of my videos for kids. If you’re an adult and you want to help
support Bite Size Vegan, check out either of the support links in the video description
below or click on the Nugget Army icon or the link in the sidebar. Now go live vegan,
leave honey to the bees, and I’ll see you soon.!
Coming up on Honeybee TV, it’s tonight’s episode of So You Think You Can Waggle?!,
where the hive’s 40,000 bees square off in a ***-shaking bonanza to impress the
queen! Stay tuned!
Subtitles by the Amara.org community