meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
But Why: A Podcast for Curious Kids

How do bees make honey and why do they sting?

But Why: A Podcast for Curious Kids

Vermont Public

Nature, Language, Kids & Family, Science

4.44.9K Ratings

🗓️ 7 October 2022

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Why do bees pollinate? How do they make honey? Why do bees have stingers? Why do (some) bees die when they sting you? What's the difference between a bee and a wasp? Does honey have healing properties? Farmer and beekeeper John Hayden answers all of your bee questions!

Download our learning guides: PDF | Google Slides | Transcript | Coloring Page

  • Bees collect nectar from flowers. Nectar is the sweet liquid that entices the bees to the flower. The bees climb onto or into the flower and suck up the nectar with their straw-like mouth and collect it in a little sac called a crop. They also collect pollen on their legs. As they move from flower to flower, they leave a little bit of that pollen on each new flower they visit. That's called pollination and it’s how flowers reproduce.

  • Bees take the pollen and nectar back to their hives and put it into the honeycomb (six-sided cells they have built out with wax). Pollen is like protein, one of the building blocks of animal bodies, and bees use that to feed their young mostly.

  • To turn nectar into honey, bees spit it up into other bees’ mouths and eventually they spit the liquid into the honeycomb cells. Then they fan it with their wings to evaporate some of the moisture. Once it has reached the right consistency, they seal it off with wax to store it for later. So honey is just concentrated nectar.

  • Bees keep the honey in storage for the winter months when there are no flowers. But they make more than they need, so beekeepers take the extra honey out of the hive and leave the bees enough to survive through the winter.

  • Bees sting to protect their hive and defend their honey from potential predators. But honeybees don’t sting unless they have to, because after they sting, their stinger gets pulled out of their body and they die! Honeybees die when they sting because their stinger has a barb on it, like a fish hook. The stinger gets hooked into your skin and then when the bee tries to fly away the hook stays in and pulls out the bee's abdomen as it flies away.

  • Honeybees are social insects who depend on their colony to survive. So they are willing to sacrifice themselves to make sure the whole colony can survive.

  • Honeybees are far from the only pollinator. Bees are very important to our ecosystem and there are more than 4000 species in the US alone. Butterflies, hummingbirds, and bats also play important pollinator roles.

Resources

How do big plants grow from small seeds?

How are babies made?

Honeybee music video

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

But why? A podcast for curious kids is known for serious answers to silly questions sent

0:07.0

in by kids just like you. But did you know that but why is now a book series?

0:12.9

Our first book, Our Lama's Ticklish, answers questions from real kids about farm animals.

0:18.8

This colorfully illustrated book is perfect for kids ages 8 to 10. And our second book,

0:24.4

To Fish Breathe Underwater, explores the underwater world of the ocean. Learn more at ButWhyKids.org

0:30.7

Slash Books.

0:37.2

This is But Why, a podcast for curious kids from Vermont Public. I'm Jane Lintone.

1:02.8

We're going to talk all about pollinators and yes we will get to stingers.

1:09.8

Those are the sounds of thousands and thousands of bees right outside my house. I am a beekeeper.

1:36.9

Have you ever seen a beekeeper? We look pretty silly when we are wearing our bee suits to

1:41.7

protect our faces and bodies from getting stung. Big white suits with a screen over our

1:47.2

heads. Beekeepers help keep a colony of honey bees healthy and safe and we sort of farm them

1:54.2

for their honey. Here in Vermont right now the fields are full of bright yellow golden

2:00.5

rod, one of the honey bees favorite foods, and I'll be harvesting the honey for my bee hives

2:06.6

in the next few weeks. So we thought this was a good time to answer some of the questions

2:11.5

you've been sending us about bees. To help me out I paid a visit to a beekeeper who has

2:17.5

a lot more experience and a lot more bees than I do.

2:21.5

Hi I'm John Hayden and I'm an organic fruit farmer at the farm between in Jeffersonville,

2:26.9

Vermont.

2:27.9

I am putting on my bee suit so that if the bees get angry and I'm dressed in white so

2:34.9

they don't see me as well. I won't think I'm a bear and they won't sting me through

2:41.3

my clothes. So that I just zipped up, take my hat off, put it on my hood, my veil here.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Vermont Public, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Vermont Public and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.