Screen Shot 2020-07-02 at 2.54.05 pm

Cool Australia Curriculum; Love Food? Love Bees! for Early Learning, Yr 5/6 and yr 9/10 Australian National curriculum aligned

The Australian Curriculum aligned “Love Food? Love Bees!” integrated units explore the importance of bees and enables students to take real and bee-friendly action in their community. Online educational material and support to bring sustainability and our environment into Australian classrooms, providing teachers with engaging, fun and informative learning activities on a whole range of topics. Worth exploring.
View Site

Great learning activities focussed on bees

Sezza Jai Sykes has created a broad range of activities focussed on language, maths, spatial, body/ kinaesthetic, music / auditory, inter and intra personal and spiritual connections to deepen our connection and appreciation with bees. Have a look at this wonderful resource.
View Site
beekeeper

Beekeepers Library

Wonderful educational resources for teachers. Have a good look as there’s a feast of ideas, music, stories, activities.
View Site
WBD-logo-ENGL-1200px-1024×1024

World Bee Day Australia

Friday May 20th 2022. Join us in celebrating World Bee Day with events around Australia, particularly at Farmers Markets on Saturday 21st May. In Canberra there will also be tours of Australian Parliament House gardens, a festival at the Embassy of Belgium and the Swiss Embassy will be hosting the film Hive at ANU on Sunday 22nd. Check out the website for up to date information.
View Site
APW_round_logo_2nd_full_week_every_year

Australian Pollinator Week

November 6–14 November 2021, . Australian Pollinator Week acknowledges our important and unique insect pollinators during our southern spring. It is a designated week when community, business and organisations can come together to raise awareness fo the important pollinators and support their needs. Find events near you, join in the Wild Pollinator Count or create an event!
View Site

Australian Wild Pollinator Count: Autumn 14-21 November 2021

The Wild Pollinator Count gives you an opportunity to contribute to wild pollinator insect conservation in Australia. We invite you to count wild pollinators in your local environment and help us build a database on wild pollinator activity. You can join in by watching any flowering plant for just ten minutes sometime in our count week. Find out how to count pollinators, identify the insects you see and submit your observations through the links at the top of the page.
View Site

Did you know?

  • Most of the bees in a hive are females and there can be up to 50,000 bees in a hive!
  • There is 1 Queen bee and a few hundred males called drones
  • Honeybees must visit some 2 million flowers to make 500 gms of honey
  • Honey bees fly around 88,000 kms to bring in enough nectar to make 500 gms of honey
  • Each bee makes about 1/12 of teaspoon of honey in her lifetime
  • Honey has natural preservatives and bacteria can’t grow in it
  • Honey was found in the tombs of Egypt and is still edible
  • Bees have been around for about 300 million years
  • A honeybee can fly 24 km at a speed of 20 kmh
  • Its wings beat 200 times per sec or 12,000 beats per minute
  • Honey comes with different flavours and colours depending on what flowers the bees collected nectar from

Bee and Nature Stories for Children

Screen Shot 2021-11-07 at 2.09.32 pm

Bee Detectives

Explore the wonders of Australian native bees and be inspired to be a bee detective too!
View Site
Screen Shot 2021-11-07 at 2.35.19 pm

Tree Beings

Trees are essential to our world. Tree Beings is your guide to appreciating trees through the stories of people who love them. So strap on your hiking boots, and enjoy this informative adventure through the wonderful world of Tree Beings!
View Site
Screen Shot 2021-11-07 at 2.38.03 pm

The Forest in the Tree: How Fungi Shape the Earth

A little fungus meets a baby cacao tree and they learn to feed each other. They cooperate with a forest of plants and a metropolis of microbes in the soil. … The fourth book in the Small Friends Books series, this science-adventure story explores the Earth-shaping partnerships between plants, fungi and bacteria.
View Site
Screen Shot 2021-11-24 at 3.03.40 pm

Costa's World

The long-awaited book from the beloved host of ABC TV’s Gardening Australia.

Bringing together all of Costa’s gardening and sustainability knowledge, this is a book for the whole family that reflects Costa’s philosophy and quirky sense of fun.
Costa’s World is a generous, joyous, fully illustrated gardening book that celebrates the life-changing joy of chooks; kids in the garden; big ideas for small spaces; Costa’s favourite plants; growing the right plants for your conditions; biodiversity in the soil and garden; the power of community; the brilliance of bees and pollinators; easy-peasy permaculture; and much, much more.

View Site
Screen Shot 2021-11-07 at 4.04.43 pm

Easy Peasy Gardening for Kids

Whether you live in the city or the countryside, there are plenty of places you can plant and grow. For a new generation of green fingers there are different ways to bring nature into the home. Make your own pots, build balcony boxes, create your own bird feeders and even get friendly with worms! Each activity has been carefully chosen to create living, renewable and sustainable environments for kids and their families. Each activity has been carefully written by Kirsten Bradley, a leading practitioner in permaculture for kids and co-founder of Milkwood permaculture farm in Australia.
View Site
Screen Shot 2021-11-07 at 2.15.23 pm

The Book of Bees Peter Socha

A fascinating big book explores an amazing range of questions about bees tracking their history from the age of dinosaurs to present day plight, examining the amazing role they have played in history and our natural world.
View Site
download (2)

Flight of the Honey Bee by Raymond Huber & Brian Lovelock

A beautifully illustrated story for children about a Scout the bee in search of the last flowers in Autumn.
Screen Shot 2021-11-07 at 2.23.51 pm

What If There Were No Bees?: A Book About the Grassland Ecosystem (Food Chain Reactions)

Grassland ecosystems can be found on nearly every continent. Countless animals and plants live in them. So what difference could the loss of one animal species make? Follow the chain reaction, and discover how important honey bees are.
the-honey-makers

The Honey Makers by Gail Gibbons

Brings alive the thousands of bees visiting millions of flowers to gather the nectar to make honey. The complexity of each task in the hive is discussed as well as understanding the rhythms of beekeepers year.
Screen Shot 2021-11-07 at 2.27.31 pm

POLLEN: Darwin's 130-Year Prediction (Moments in Science)

On January 25, 1862, naturalist Charles Darwin received a box of orchids. One flower, the Madagascar star orchid, fascinated him. It had an 11.5” nectary, the place where flowers make nectar, the sweet liquid that insects and birds eat. How, he wondered, did insects pollinate the orchid? It took 130 years to find the answer.
After experiments, he made a prediction. There must be a giant moth with a 11.5” proboscis, a straw-like tongue. Darwin died without ever seeing the moth, which was catalogued by entomologists in in 1903. But still no one had actually observed the moth pollinating the orchid.

For Kids

Go outside and look for bees. What colour are they? What colours are the flowers they enjoy? Are there different types of bees in your garden?

When you go walking in the bush, keep a lookout for ‘natural hives’ in tree hollows or even hanging from tree branches. It is wonderful to watch the wild bees flying in and out of their hive and glimpse them on the wax comb.

Sign up to  Backyard Buddies  a free education initiative run by the Australian Foundation for National Parks & Wildlife (FNPW). It gives you simple tips to transform your backyard into a safe and inviting habitat haven. Backyard Buddies are the native plants and animals that share our built-up areas, waterways, backyards and parks. Backyard Buddies are also the people who value native wildlife and want to protect it.

Films and YouTube

Marla Spivak: Why Bees Are disappearing

Honeybees have thrived for 50 million years, each colony 40 to 50,000 individuals coordinated in amazing harmony. So why, seven years ago, did colonies start dying en masse? Marla Spivak reveals four reasons which are interacting with tragic consequences. This is not simply a problem because bees pollinate a third of the world’s crops. Could this incredible species be holding up a mirror for us?
View Video

Louie Schwartzberg: The hidden beauty of pollination

Amazing You Tube clip
View Video

How One Woman Uses Beekeeping to Change Lives

HIVES is about short film about a Vancouver-based community worker, Sarah Common, who uses beekeeping to reconnect people to their communities, the land, and themselves. As a sideways glance at the Downtown Eastside, a community that has historically been represented in a negative light for their centralisation of drug use and poverty, Sarah Common’s story shows something different: Moments of beauty, hope and positivity.
View Site

Bees On Earth

Growing a Wind Garden-Arts Project. The Common Ground exhibition features a variety of projects that present how students in schools across British Columbia explored their local landscape and its relationship with the people, animals and plants who live there.
View Video

Dance of the Honey Bee

A beautiful short film about honey bees by Peter Nelson. Original score by John Powell. Narrated by Bill McKibben.
View Video

Queen of the Sun: What are the Bees Telling Us?

A profound, alternative look at the global Bee Crisis from award winning film maker Taggart Siegel.
View Site

Greenbees

Brilliant short clip by Greenpeace on bees and pesticides. Save the bees, save the humans.
View Video

The Waggle Dance of the Honeybee

How can honeybees communicate the locations of new food sources? Austrian biologist, Karl Von Frisch, devised an experiment to find out! By pairing the direction of the sun with the flow of gravity, honeybees are able to explain the distant locations of food by dancing. “The Waggle Dance of the Honeybee” details the design of Von Frisch’s famous experiment and explains the precise grammar of the honeybees dance language with high quality visualisations.
View Video

Posters and Planners

Screen Shot 2021-12-06 at 12.38.52 pm

Australian Native Bee Posters

Beautiful native bees of Australia by Gina Cranson
Screen Shot 2021-12-06 at 12.56.29 pm

Honeybees Infographic

Screen Shot 2021-12-06 at 12.59.21 pm

Bee Kind!

Screen Shot 2021-12-06 at 1.02.41 pm

Dirt Girl's Bee Poster

Screen Shot 2021-12-06 at 1.04.33 pm

Australian Butterflies Poster

The poster is a great companion for the book.
Displaying all 60 butterflies featured in the book at actual size.