8/24/2015

2015 Revised Music & Gospel Music Schedule

Friday Sept 4, 2015

6:00 Jamie Campbell
6:30 Elvis TC of Boyd
7:00 Gary Fugate
8:00 Star Lite Devils
9:00 Taylor Dye
10:00 Burn Down
11:00. Saving Sanity


Saturday Sept. 5, 2015

1:00. - 3:00 Morgan Hudson with Southern Pride Cloggers
Come out he is going to give lessons for beginners also.
3:00 Salt Creek
4:00 Blackpowder Express
5:00 Clinton Frye
6:00 Salt Creek
7:00 Blackpowder Express
8:00 Sophie & Emmie Deaton
9:00 The Country Troubadours
10:00 Kayla Beth Smith
11:00 Travis Ritche and Friends

Sunday Sept 6, 2015

Gospel Music

12:00 Kendra Thorpe Noble
12:15 Rosalee Moore
12:30 Melissa Estep Duff
12:45 Elizabeth Campbell Mullins
1:00 Jeff Johnson
1:15 The Couch Family
2:00 Rosalee Moore
2:15 Panbowl Full Gospel
3:00 Elizabeth Campbell Mullins
3:15 John Tincher & Friends
4:00 Kendra Thorpe Noble
4:15 Anointed
5:00 Melissa Estep Duff
5:15 Proclaim Trio (Ky Mountain Bible College)
6:00 Billy Jo Mullins
6:30 Community Worship Service
8:00 Billy Joe Mullins
8:30 Jack Strong
10:30 Travis Ritche and Friends
Please bring your lawn chairs and get under the tent provided for shade and rain.

8/08/2015

Jenny Wiley Dulcimers and Kits



Jeff Lambert will be a new exhibitor at the 2015 Honey Festival. Stop by his booth to discover or re-discover this Appalachian Craft!

Jeff  hand crafts each of his dulcimers in his woodshop, located in beautiful Elliott County, Kentucky. Learn more about how his dulcimers are created in the pages of his web-site:  http://www.dulcimersbyjeff.com 

The dulcimers are available completely finished or in a kit form (for those who want the joy of building their own instrument). 

Enjoy the simple, sweet tones of these finely manufactured instruments. The Mountain or Appalachian dulcimer is one of the easiest of all stringed instruments to play. The Dulcimer is in the midst of a great revival. People around the world are buying, building and playing this unique and historic musical instrument! 

Check out this You Tube video:

Jeff Lambert Builds and Plays Dulcimers

7/07/2015

2015 Applications



The 2015 Breathitt County Honey  Festival will be featured in the Kentucky Living Magazine's upcoming issue.

Great publicity for our Festival.

Be sure to get your applications in for this year. We are going to have great festival.

Honey Bee Facts

FACTS ABOUT HONEYBEES
Pollination
Agriculture depends greatly on the honeybee for pollination. Honeybees account for 80% of all insect pollination. Without such pollination, we would see a significant decrease in the yield of fruits and vegetables.
Pollen
Bees collect 66 lbs of pollen per year, per hive. Pollen is the male germ cells produced by all flowering plants for fertilization and plant embryo formation. The Honeybee uses pollen as a food. Pollen is one of the richest and purest natural foods, consisting of up to 35% protein, 10% sugars, carbohydrates, enzymes, minerals, and vitamins A (carotenes), B1 (thiamin), B2 (riboflavin), B3 (nicotinic acid), B5 (panothenic acid), C (ascorbic acid), H (biotin), and R (rutine).
Honey
Honey is used by the bees for food all year round. There are many types, colors and flavors of honey, depending upon its nectar source. The bees make honey from the nectar they collect from flowering trees and plants. Honey is an easily digestible, pure food. Honey is hydroscopic and has antibacterial qualities. Eating local honey can fend off allergies.
Beeswax
Secreted from glands, beeswax is used by the honeybee to build honey comb. It is used by humans in drugs, cosmetics, artists' materials, furniture polish and candles.
Propolis
Collected by honeybees from trees, the sticky resin is mixed with wax to make a sticky glue. The bees use this to seal cracks and repair their hive. It is used by humans as a health aid, and as the basis for fine wood varnishes.
Royal Jelly
The powerful, milky substance that turns an ordinary bee into a Queen Bee. It is made of digested pollen and honey or nectar mixed with a chemical secreted from a gland in a nursing bee's head. It commands premium prices rivaling imported caviar, and is used by some as a dietary supplement and fertility stimulant. It is loaded with all of the B vitamins.
Bee Venom
The "ouch" part of the honeybee. Although sharp pain and some swelling and itching are natural reactions to a honeybee sting, a small percentage of individuals are highly allergic to bee venom. "Bee venom therapy" is widely practiced overseas and by some in the USA to address health problems such as arthritis, neuralgia, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and even MS.

OTHER BITS OF INFORMATION
Honeybees are not native to the USA. They are European in origin, and were brought to North America by the early settlers.
Honeybees are not aggressive by nature, and will not sting unless protecting their hive from an intruder or are unduly provoked.
Honeybees represent a highly organized society, with various bees having very specific roles during their lifetime: e.g., nurses, guards, grocers, housekeepers, construction workers, royal attendants, undertakers, foragers, etc.
The queen bee can live for several years. Worker bees live for 6 weeks during the busy summer, and for 4-9 months during the winter months.
The practice of honey collection and beekeeping dates back to the stone-age, as evidenced by cave paintings.
The honeybee hive is perennial. Although quite inactive during the winter, the honeybee survives the winter months by clustering for warmth. By self-regulating the internal temperature of the cluster, the bees maintain 93 degrees Fahrenheit in the center of the winter cluster (regardless of the outside temperature).

THREE CASTES OF HONEYBEE
Queen Bee 
There is only one queen per hive. The queen is the only bee with fully developed ovaries. A queen bee can live for 3-5 years. The queen mates only once with several male (drone) bees, and will remain fertile for life. She lays up to 2000 eggs per day. Fertilized eggs become female (worker bees) and unfertilized eggs become male (drone bees). When she dies or becomes unproductive, the other bees will "make" a new queen by selecting a young larva and feeding it a diet of "royal jelly". For queen bees, it takes 16 days from egg to emergence.
Worker Bee 
All worker bees are female, but they are not able to reproduce. Worker bees live for 4-9 months during the winter season, but only 6 weeks during the busy summer months (they literally work themselves to death). Nearly all of the bees in a hive are worker bees. A hive consists of 20,000 - 30,000 bees in the winter, and over 60,000 - 80,000 bees in the summer. The worker bees sequentially take on a series of specific chores during their lifetime: housekeeper; nursemaid; construction worker; grocer; undertaker; guard; and finally, after 21 days they become a forager collecting pollen and nectar. For worker bees, it takes 21 days from egg to emergence. The worker bee has a barbed stinger that results in her death following stinging, therefore, she can only sting once.
Drone Bee 
These male bees are kept on standby during the summer for mating with a virgin queen. Because the drone has a barbed sex organ, mating is followed by death of the drone. There are only 300-3000 drones in a hive. The drone does not have a stinger. Because they are of no use in the winter, drones are expelled from the hive in the autumn.

http://www.backyardbeekeepers.com/facts.html