A bedtime cuppa with chamomile and #swamphoney is just the right nightcap. Thanks, nostr:nprofile1qqsdv7ds7ny5ssc8wvqujgzgpjwj7tgje8ax6yp49cf5avwqsg56exspz3mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduqs6amnwvaz7tmwdaejumr0dsq3vamnwvaz7tmjv4kxz7fwdehhxarj9e3xzmny8azw0e and nostr:nprofile1qqswvecv67selg4kt6798430saw09y2mx7g93gdhm8cqzdzw8t6fr0cpzdmhxue69uhhqatjwpkx2urpvuhx2ue04v2wlj (and your buzzy friends!)

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I'm going to start an orchestral group in Louisiana called The Swamphony.

Please tell me you'll find some way to work the natural sounds of the swamp into your movements.

This will be amazing and I can't wait!

We've got ol' Boudreaux on the gator.

I will tell the bees. Glad to hear you’re enjoying it!

Swamp honey?…

Honey made by bees that have been hanging around gallberry plants.

Thanks

Thank you for the note. All of our honey is swamp honey, as we are located in the middle of a swamp. Yet, Gallberry (aka ilex, holly, blooming for three weeks in April) is a primary nectar source for the honey by that name. Wildflower is composed of many different nectar sources, from many different flowers, reflecting that season’s honey flow (early spring), late spring, summer, fall in that geographical area. Hope this clears up the rather confusing nectar tastes of different honey.