Jara (beehive)

Last updated

A jara is a traditional beehive made from a hollowed log cut in two that has been used since ancient times for domesticating bees in Georgia. Bees build honeycomb in a Jara beehive completely by itself. [1] Nowadays, Jara beehives are mainly found in Adjara region of western Georgia. [2]

Contents

History and origin of Jara beehive

There is no evidence for when exactly Jara appeared in Georgia. However, several local folk tales note that ancient inhabitants found the bees in a tree hollow, and they called this place in the forest ‘the bee tree’. Later, locals realized that the ‘bee trees’ could be replicated. They collected swarms of wild bees and settled them into hollowed wooden logs and then placed them high up in trees to protect them from bears. Such wooden logs were called Jara. [3]

Jara beehive sites

In old times, when daily life of local population was closely tied to the forest, Jara beehives were placed in the middle of the forest high up in a Linden tree to protect the beehives from bears and other wild animals. Jara beehives were also placed on the rocks, on around 1200 meters above sea level since the rocks were the safest place for Jara but the most difficult for harvesting; [4] With the development of agriculture and weakening links with the forest, the locals began placing the Jara beehives in the gardens near their homes. This has enabled them to collect swarms in an easier manner and increase the apiary and its productivity. It is where Jara beehives can be mostly found these days. Beekeepers, living in high Adjarian mountains, protect the Jara beehives from severe winter conditions through placing them in specially built wooden shelters.

The structure of Jara beehive

A Jara is typically crafted from Linden wood (Tilia Caucascica), selected for its lightweight nature and lack of strong odor, which helps in not disturbing the bees. Creating a Jara beehive requires specialized knowledge and skill. The bottom cover is meticulously carved to precisely match the upper cover. The upper cover holds the honeycomb and protects the beehives from damage. Jara beehives are different in length and size ranging from 80 to 120 cm with an outer diameter reaching 40–60 cm while inner diameter is usually 25–35 cm. [5] The Jara beehives are made of 100% wood without using a single nail. A 1 cm beehive entrance is arranged in the lower cover of the Jara. In addition, the upper cover must contain so called a divider, which is usually made of a wooden plank from the roots of a fir tree. The divider also serves as a moth repellent.

Jara-structure-eng.jpg

Harvesting Jara honey

Bees build honeycomb in a Jara entirely by themselves. Therefore, the Jara beehive does not contain any artificial wax. The Jara honey is harvested only once a year mainly at the beginning of autumn after the ending of a flowering season. Harvesting honey from the Jara beehive is much more difficult and labor-intensive than from common frame beehives. The process requires special preparation. As a rule, honey from a Jara is harvested by two people. However, additional support is needed for a Jara beehive placed in a tree or on a rock. Beekeepers use special instruments such as oval knives, smokers, ropes, balancers (Kombali), pulleys (Makhara), and branch-ladders (Ghja) for harvesting honey. First, a beekeeper opens and observes the hive inside to understand whether it is possible to harvest honey. If there is enough honey, the beekeeper cuts honeycomb from half of the beehive and does not touch the other half where the bee colony brood is located. Jara honeycomb can be different in color as it contains the honey from different plants and flowers such as acacia, chestnut, linden and a vast number of alpine flowers. [6]

Jara – The monument of intangible cultural heritage of Georgia

In 2021 the National Agency for Cultural Heritage Preservation of Georgia granted a status of a monument of intangible cultural heritage of Georgia to honey-making method in Jara beehives. [7]

Jara beekeeping today

Since the 20th century, Jara beehives have been increasingly replaced by modern beehives in Georgia. But there are still few places in Western Georgia, region of Adjara where Jara beehives are still used to make the wild Jara honey [8]

In addition, a documentary called Jara was filmed in 2017 which tells a story of a 1-year journey in wild nature of Adjara featuring Jara beehives and their inhabitant bees. [9]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Beehive</span> Structure housing a honey bee colony

A beehive is an enclosed structure where some honey bee species of the subgenus Apis live and raise their young. Though the word beehive is used to describe the nest of any bee colony, scientific and professional literature distinguishes nest from hive. Nest is used to discuss colonies that house themselves in natural or artificial cavities or are hanging and exposed. The term hive is used to describe an artificial/man-made structure to house a honey bee nest. Several species of Apis live in colonies. But for honey production, the western honey bee and the eastern honey bee are the main species kept in hives.

<i>Tilia</i> Plant genus

Tilia is a genus of about 30 species of trees or bushes, native throughout most of the temperate Northern Hemisphere. The tree is known as linden for the European species, and basswood for North American species. In Great Britain and Ireland they are commonly called lime trees, although they are not related to the citrus lime. The genus occurs in Europe and eastern North America, but the greatest species diversity is found in Asia. Under the Cronquist classification system, this genus was placed in the family Tiliaceae, but genetic research summarised by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group has resulted in the incorporation of this genus, and of most of the previous family, into the Fabaceae.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Beekeeper</span> Person who keeps honey bees

A beekeeper is a person who keeps honey bees, a profession known as beekeeping.

Beekeeping is the maintenance of bee colonies, commonly in artificial beehives. Honey bees in the genus Apis are the most commonly kept species but other honey producing bees such as Melipona stingless bees are also kept. Beekeepers keep bees to collect honey and other products of the hive: beeswax, propolis, bee pollen, and royal jelly. Other sources of beekeeping income include pollination of crops, raising queens, and production of package bees for sale. Bee hives are kept in an apiary or "bee yard".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pollination management</span> Horticultural practices to enhance pollination

Pollination management is the horticultural practices that accomplish or enhance pollination of a crop, to improve yield or quality, by understanding of the particular crop's pollination needs, and by knowledgeable management of pollenizers, pollinators, and pollination conditions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bee brood</span> Chamber of a beehive

In beekeeping, bee brood or brood refers to the eggs, larvae and pupae of honeybees. The brood of Western honey bees develops within a bee hive. In man-made, removable frame hives, such as Langstroth hives, each frame which is mainly occupied by brood is called a brood frame. Brood frames usually have some pollen and nectar or honey in the upper corners of the frame. The rest of the brood frame cells may be empty or occupied by brood in various developmental stages. During the brood raising season, the bees may reuse the cells from which brood has emerged for additional brood or convert it to honey or pollen storage. Bees show remarkable flexibility in adapting cells to a use best suited for the hive's survival.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Horizontal top-bar hive</span> Type of beehive

A top-bar hive is a single-story frameless beehive in which the comb hangs from removable bars. The bars form a continuous roof over the comb, whereas the frames in most current hives allow space for bees to move up or down between boxes. Hives that have frames or that use honey chambers in summer but which use management principles similar to those of regular top-bar hives are sometimes also referred to as top-bar hives. Top-bar hives are rectangular in shape and are typically more than twice as wide as multi-story framed hives commonly found in English-speaking countries. Top-bar hives usually include one box only, and allow for beekeeping methods that interfere very little with the colony. While conventional advice often recommends inspecting each colony each week during the warmer months, heavy work when full supers have to be lifted, some beekeepers fully inspect top-bar hives only once a year, and only one comb needs to be lifted at a time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Langstroth hive</span> Vertically modular beehive with hung brood and honey frames

In beekeeping, a Langstroth hive is any vertically modular beehive that has the key features of vertically hung frames, a bottom board with entrance for the bees, boxes containing frames for brood and honey and an inner cover and top cap to provide weather protection. In a Langstroth hive, the bees build honeycomb into frames, which can be moved with ease. The frames are designed to prevent bees from attaching honeycombs where they would either connect adjacent frames, or connect frames to the walls of the hive. The movable frames allow the beekeeper to manage the bees in a way which was formerly impossible.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Swarming (honey bee)</span> Reproduction method of honeybee colonies

Swarming is a honey bee colony's natural means of reproduction. In the process of swarming, a single colony splits into two or more distinct colonies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Honey extractor</span> Device for extracting honey from honey comb

A honey extractor is a mechanical device used in the extraction of honey from honeycombs. A honey extractor extracts the honey from the honey comb without destroying the comb. Extractors work by centrifugal force. A drum or container holds a frame basket which spins, flinging the honey out. With this method the wax comb stays intact within the frame and can be reused by the bees.

Hive management in beekeeping refers to intervention techniques that a beekeeper may perform to ensure hive survival and to maximize hive production. Hive management techniques vary widely depending on the objectives.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Petro Prokopovych</span> Ukrainian beekeeper

Petro Prokopovych was a Ukrainian beekeeper who made revolutionary contributions to the practice. They include the founding of commercial beekeeping and the invention of the first movable frame hive. He introduced novelties in traditional beekeeping that allowed great progress in the practice. Among his most important inventions was a hive frame in a separate honey chamber of his beehive. He also invented a crude queen excluder between brood and honey chambers. Petro Prokopovych was also the first to ever model a 'bee beard' after delineating and calculating 'bee swarm behaviour", inspiring students for generations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bee smoker</span> Device which produces smoke; used in beekeeping

A bee smoker is a device used in beekeeping to calm honey bees. It is designed to generate smoke from the smoldering of various fuels, hence the name. It is commonly designed as a stainless steel cylinder with a lid that narrows to a small gap. The base of the cylinder has another small opening that is adjacent to a bellow nozzle. Pumping of the bellows forces air through the bottom opening. The cylinder may also have a wire frame around to protect hands from burning. Some smokers have a hook on the side allowing the user to hang the device on the side of a beehive for easy access during an inspection or attach it to an ALICE belt when not in use.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Langstroth Cottage</span> Historic house in Ohio, United States

Langstroth Cottage is a historic building on the Western College campus of Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. It was designated a National Historic Landmark on June 22, 1976. The cottage, built in 1856, is now the home for the Oxford office of the Butler County Regional Transit Authority. It was purchased for Beekeeper L. L. Langstroth in 1859, and he lived there for the next 28 years, conducting research and breeding honey bees.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Honey extraction</span> Process of harvesting honey from honeycomb

Honey extraction is the central process in beekeeping of removing honey from honeycomb so that it is isolated in a pure liquid form.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Honey hunting</span> Collection of honey from wild bee colonies

Honey hunting or honey harvesting is the gathering of honey from wild bee colonies. It is one of the most ancient human activities and is still practiced by aboriginal societies in parts of Africa, Asia, Australia and South America. Some of the earliest evidence of gathering honey from wild colonies is from rock painting, dating to around 8,000 BC. In the Middle Ages in Europe, the gathering of honey from wild or semi-wild bee colonies was carried out on a commercial scale.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heath beekeeping</span>

Heath beekeeping was a specialist form of beekeeping, which was intensively practised by beekeepers on the Lüneburg Heath from the Middle Ages until the 19th century, but which is now very rarely encountered. It was also referred to as Lüneburger SchwarmbienenzuchtLüneburger Heideimkerei or Lüneburger Korbimkerei. Typical features were beehives made of plaited straw baskets or skeps, the use of heathland flowers, frequent moving of bees to worthwhile feeding areas and the enormous multiplication of bee colonies through swarming.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Urban beekeeping</span> Practice of keeping bee colonies in urban areas

Urban beekeeping is the practice of keeping bee colonies (hives) in towns and cities. It is also referred to as hobby beekeeping or backyard beekeeping. Bees from city apiaries are said to be "healthier and more productive than their country cousins". As pollinators, bees also provide environmental and economic benefits to cities. They are essential in the growth of crops and flowers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Beekeeping in India</span> Project

Beekeeping in India has been mentioned in ancient Vedas and Buddhist scriptures. Rock paintings of Mesolithic era found in Madhya Pradesh depict honey collection activities. Scientific methods of beekeeping, however, started only in the late 19th century, although records of taming honeybees and using in warfare are seen in the early 19th century. After Indian independence, beekeeping was promoted through various rural developmental programs. Five species of bees that are commercially important for natural honey and beeswax production are found in India.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Provence Honey</span>

Miel de Provence is protected by a Label Rouge associated to a protected geographical indication both for the all flowers honey and for the lavender and lavandin honey

References