Description
We love the smell and feel of this soap, especially during the winter!
Ingredients: Saponified organic castor and coconut oils, organic cocoa butter with fir, balsam and Scotch pine essential oils
Weight approximately 4 oz.
$4.00 – $10.00
We love the smell and feel of this soap, especially during the winter!
Ingredients: Saponified organic castor and coconut oils, organic cocoa butter with fir, balsam and Scotch pine essential oils
Weight approximately 4 oz.
Weight | 4 oz |
---|---|
Dimensions | 4 × 1 × 3 in |
Soaps | 1 Bar of Soap, 3 Bars of Soap |
This handcrafted fountain pen is for the executive with discerning taste! The Emperor series is considered one of the best-made pens available today and comes equipped with the high-quality Schmidt converter, ink cartridge, and a German-made, gold plated medium point steel nib. The body is hand-turned and polished TruStone® marble. This is a pen worthy of signing peace treaties!
Did you know that it takes approximately 33 million flower visits for honey bees to produce a single pound of beeswax? Honey bees use the wax to make honeycomb, which serves a multitude of purposes within their hives. Comb serves as the nursery where bees raise their young, as a pantry for them to store food, a floor for them to stroll around the hive, and even as their version of the Internet so they can communicate! How? Bees “hear” with their feet! When a single honey bee finds a source of nectar or pollen, she returns to the hive (remember it’s very dark inside) and does a dance–the waggle dance–to tell surrounding bees about her discovery and to provide exact directions to its location! Since they cannot see her, the vibration of her dance is transmitted to the other bees via the honeycomb, making it their version of the Internet! For us, burning beeswax candles vs parrafin or soy is purported to offer a number of health benefits. As beeswax candles are all natural, they do not produce toxic byproducts and heavy soot when burned. Instead, they actually produce negative ions which help neutralize pollutants. This helps eliminate dust, odors, and mold in the atmosphere, easing allergy and asthma symptoms and improving breathing for anyone nearby. Since beeswax candles are all natural and produce no byproducts, they are naturally dripless when used properly and are thus safer to burn. It is important to keep them (actually ANY candle) perfectly straight and away from drafts. The fact that our candles are made from 100% natural products means they also burn slower. Beeswax candles also produce the brightest light and are the closest to natural sunlight. Definitely plus if the lights go out and candles become your primary light source! Sigh…Pardon us, but we think if you are smart enough to use a computer, then you are at least smart enough to burn a candle! However, today is today so here is the “cover our butt” warning…Never leave any candle unattended while burning or leave unattended with children! Keep all flammable objects away from burning candles. Place all candles on a non-flammable container when burning. If using wooden candleholders, extinguish the flame 1/2″ before it touches the wood. Feel free to add more. Fires are not funny so please use common sense.
For us, it’s not about the honey–though we sure do love it! It’s really about the bees. Honey is simply a measure of the successes and failures we experience trying to create the right balance for our bees to prosper. The fact that honey is one of the healthiest foods known to man makes it that much better! Read more about our philosophy.
Workers bees will visit 2,000,000 flowers and fly 55,000 miles to make just 1 pound of honey. Foragers may make 10 trips a day and will visit 50 – 100 of the exact same type of flower per trip. This makes honeybees responsible for 80% of all pollination and provides us with 95 different fruits and vegetables that would not exist without them. Read more bee facts.
Honey supplies 2 stages of energy. The glucose in honey is absorbed by the body quickly and gives an immediate energy boost. The fructose is absorbed more slowly providing sustained energy. Read more honey facts.
Mead, wine made from honey, is the most ancient fermented beverage. The term "honey moon" originated with the Norse practice of consuming large quantities of Mead during the first month of a marriage. Read more honey facts.
The queen can lay up to 2000 eggs per day (her approximate body weight) in the heat of summer. She is unable to clean or feed herself and relies entirely on attendants for her survival. If the hive decides to swarm, the bees will chase the queen around the hive so she looses sufficient weight to fly. Read more bee facts.
HANDCRAFTED from NATURE’S FINEST in WESTMORELAND NEW HAMPSHIRE