This ten acre property is 1 mile east of Exit 37 on I-90. Notice the view of famous sacred mountain, Bear Butte, in the background. The even more famous Buffalo Chip Campground, a major player in the Sturgis Harley-Davidson Motorcycle Rally, is near The Butte.
But these outside views of the property are far less striking than the surprising interior photo's, shown at www.PleasantValleyHome.com.
Whoooo-BOY ! Great to be back in the air !!!!
10/30/10
9/5/10
STOP! THIEF! I'm Bee-ing Robbed!
...or not. Heard a great frenzy of in-flight bees surrounding the hives. Thirty minutes later it was calm inside and outside the hives. But, still, there were these large galutes coming and going, and not a one of them was seen to be bringing home pollen for the good of the colony. Just don't know, are these drones? Robbers? Just big, lazy ladies?
8/11/10
LEE'z BEE'z GET A FRONT DOOR SECURITY WEBCAM
The first part of this movie is playing at 1/2 speed. Most of it is running at 1/3 speed. Sure makes it easier to observe bee behaviors.
Notice the arriving cargo bees with pollen packed on their legs. Also, do you agree there is a non-random number of instances where an arriving bee head-butts a departing bee? Notice starting at 21 seconds, a bee stumbles out of the house on to the front deck, rubs her face with her front feet as if to wake up, then takes off for the day. In the last second, see on the right where an arriving bee and a bee just taken off collide. This is a very busy airport.
Notice the arriving cargo bees with pollen packed on their legs. Also, do you agree there is a non-random number of instances where an arriving bee head-butts a departing bee? Notice starting at 21 seconds, a bee stumbles out of the house on to the front deck, rubs her face with her front feet as if to wake up, then takes off for the day. In the last second, see on the right where an arriving bee and a bee just taken off collide. This is a very busy airport.
7/26/10
TALE OF TWO HIVES
Two new duplicate bee colonies, from the same source, were installed on the same day in early June, in identical hives only two feet apart. One colony is building parallel planes of wax comb and filling it with well behaved little girls, surrounded by orderly and consistent honey.
But the other colony right next door is running amok, building curve-shaped comb in total disregard for the carefully constructed prepared frames inside their hive box. This unruly, doing-it-my-way colony is building new babies, new comb and new honey faster than the fastidious, engineers next door.
See? This is what happens to a community when an engineer is not in charge of order, discipline, planning and design.
Speaking of engineers...notice on the photo at left how the bees are hanging in a chain. And notice there is no guide telling them how to build comb straight down. That chain of bees is believed by some, to be like a gravity-driven plumb-bob. It tells the other bees what direction is down. That's how the bees get panels of comb to be parallel to each other.
Next class, we'll go over the hexagon (the shape of every single one of the cells) and why the mathematics of structural engineering confirms that the strongest/simplest structure is a triangle, and a hexagon is just six triangles formed to simulate a circle. The beehive comb-cell, it turns out, is the mathematically optimized maximum structural strength from the minimum of construction materials. (Hey, if you had to make 13,000 flights to flowers a mile away just to build one 1/4" comb-cell, you'd be focused on structural economization, too.)
But the other colony right next door is running amok, building curve-shaped comb in total disregard for the carefully constructed prepared frames inside their hive box. This unruly, doing-it-my-way colony is building new babies, new comb and new honey faster than the fastidious, engineers next door.
See? This is what happens to a community when an engineer is not in charge of order, discipline, planning and design.
Speaking of engineers...notice on the photo at left how the bees are hanging in a chain. And notice there is no guide telling them how to build comb straight down. That chain of bees is believed by some, to be like a gravity-driven plumb-bob. It tells the other bees what direction is down. That's how the bees get panels of comb to be parallel to each other.
Next class, we'll go over the hexagon (the shape of every single one of the cells) and why the mathematics of structural engineering confirms that the strongest/simplest structure is a triangle, and a hexagon is just six triangles formed to simulate a circle. The beehive comb-cell, it turns out, is the mathematically optimized maximum structural strength from the minimum of construction materials. (Hey, if you had to make 13,000 flights to flowers a mile away just to build one 1/4" comb-cell, you'd be focused on structural economization, too.)
6/9/10
THIS DOESN'T TAKE A REAL ESTATE GENIOUS
From our back yard in Piedmont, SD.
If you ever see something better than this...buy it.
At any price.
If you ever see something better than this...buy it.
At any price.
6/1/10
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