05/29/2026
🌼🐝 Why do honeybees love those beautiful spring days with cool nights and warm afternoons?
The answer lies in plant physiology.
During cool nights, plants continue to produce sugars through photosynthesis that occurred during the previous day. Because temperatures are lower, the plant's respiration rate slows down, meaning fewer of those sugars are consumed for growth and maintenance. This allows sugars to accumulate within the plant.
As temperatures rise the following day, these stored sugars are transported to the flowers and secreted into the nectaries—the specialized structures that produce nectar. The result is often nectar with a higher sugar concentration, making it more attractive and rewarding to pollinators like honeybees.
Warm daytime temperatures also increase nectar flow within the flower, making it easier for bees to collect. Research has shown that nectar production and sugar concentration are influenced by both temperature and humidity, with many flowering plants producing their most concentrated nectar during periods of cool nights and warm, sunny days.
For honeybees, this means a stronger nectar flow. Worker bees can gather more energy-rich nectar in fewer trips, allowing the colony to increase honey production and build food reserves more efficiently.
So when you see bees working overtime after a stretch of cool nights and warm days, you're witnessing a fascinating partnership between weather, flowers, and pollinators—one that ultimately helps fill the honey supers with liquid gold. 🍯✨