I'm in georgia....anybody know the source of this bright orange pollen? Tons of it coming in right now. I suspect its golden rod but I really dont know.
Fish, first let me say what a beautiful clear close up photo. Please discuss the camera, I think you said Samsung in a previous post??? Which one??
Second, I see the same colored vivid orange pollen over here in N. Arkansas, this day. One flower that is currently prolific and in bloom is Bitterweed. However I see that same color pollen in Spring when there is no bitterweed. Vivid orange is a common color for pollen of many species of plants.
The one pollen that makes my favorite light colored honey is a blonde color pollen, which I only see in Spring and early summer. I have yet to identify the pollen source, maybe white clover.
Cheers
Van it is a Samsung. It's my cell phone. A samsung galaxy Note 8. It actually takes much better pictures that that. If I allow it to focus properly you can count the hairs on the bees. Lol. This picture was actually a screen shot from a video. Instead of trying to quickly snap a picture of a bee scurrying in loaded with pollen I just stood there and took a 30 second video of the bees coming and going. Then later while in the ac on the couch paused the video and took this screen shot.
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Same pollen??? This is individual photo, hand held. I like your idea, Fish, of a screen shot from video.
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Close up of an empty polished cell. Learning new phone camera here.
Blessings
Good clear photos as well van. And yes that looks like the same pollen to me.
It may be dandelion? Its had a comeback here and i haven't seen it since spring. It can't be white clover that is a dark grey pollen.
We?re getting sumac that has that color pollen right now.
I?m seeing close to the same as well. I checked a bunch of golden rod on me today. Only saw one bee on it. My buckwheat has started to bloom and not a bee on it either. Not sure what they are working then.
I?ve got marigolds and mandarin merrigolds growing like gang busters
Quote from: van from Arkansas on August 16, 2019, 08:19:06 PM
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Close up of an empty polished cell. Learning new phone camera here.
Blessings
Mr Van, what is the khaki colored stuff in the top center of the picture? Has my Curiosity blooming. :cheesy:
Phillip
I also am getting this bright orange pollen coming in. My bees are working a field of Golden Rod and a tall yellow cone flower like a yellow Echinacea. It is dry as a bone here in southern West Virginia and my bees are drinking hard from my water supplies. I also see the bees working joe pye weed.
Central Georgia is also dry. No pollen either. My bees are coming back empty. I have not see any golden here, and I have been looking.
Quote from: Ben Framed on August 18, 2019, 12:13:55 AM
Quote from: van from Arkansas on August 16, 2019, 08:19:06 PM
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Close up of an empty polished cell. Learning new phone camera here.
Blessings
Mr Van, what is the khaki colored stuff in the top center of the picture? Has my Curiosity blooming. :cheesy:
Phillip
Phillip, that is some loose pollen debris on top of the cell. I deliberately included in the pic to determine resolution; trying out new iPhone camera.
Mr. Bobll have you fed your bees subpollen such as offered by the big bee supply companies? During a dearth my bees adore the stuff.
Van
Perhaps this is helpful.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pollen_sources
Thanks for posting. I?m going to save that.
Don't most states have 'pollen readings' or something when they do the weather?
Someone said something about this recently in something I wasn't listening to. They were talking about you could analyze and actually track the pollen counts kept and posted in news or whatever.
Here...
https://www.weatherbug.com/life/pollen/
https://www.pollen.com/
Anyway, my computer is old and doesn't have all the plug-ins, so I can't tell if it tells you what the pollen count breakdown is from or not. But you might be able to use this concept to help identify where and what stuff is coming from per your question.
Also, this would also let you write down a calendar map of your nectar flows by charting the pollen counts weekly, monthly, or even daily if you wanted. (This would help you in tons of ways.)
I really like that you posted a pic, opening poster!