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World's largest honey bee, the Himalayan Cliff Bee produces rare honey








Near the peaks of the Himalayan Mountains, a harsh region in which no human settlements are found, lives the world's largest honey bee, the Himalayan Cliff Bee which can grow as large as three centimeters in length. The red honey produced by these bees is unlike any honey you'd find on a supermarket shelf as it possesses fascinating psychoactive properties that are prized by the locals of Nepal and China for its ability to help those with diabetes, poor sexual performance, hypertension, and more. Nov.13  http://www.sott.net/article/306256-Worlds-largest-honey-bee-the-Himalayan-Cliff-Bee-produces-rare-honey







A chart for the current New Moon of Nov. 11 drawn for Kathmandu, Nepal can help explain the news. Notice that the New Moon is on the IC of the chart and forms a Yod with Jupiter and Uranus. Jupiter is placed in Virgo, the sign linked to health issues while a Jupiter-Uranus combination hints at a “fortunate discovery”. The New Moon [19sc]  itself is conjunct the star beta Musca [20sc] in the constellation of the Musca or Apis, Southern Fly or the Honey Bee!

Musca Australis vel Indica, the Southern or Indian Fly, the French Mouche Australe ou Indienne, the German Sudliche Fliege, and the Italian Mosca Australe, lies partly in the Milky Way, south of the Cross (Crux), and east of the Chamaeleon. This title generally is supposed to have been substituted by La Caille, about 1752, for Bayer's Apis, the Bee; but Halley, in 1679, had called it Musca Apis; and even previous to him, Riccioli catalogued it as Apis seu Musca. Even in our day the idea of a Bee prevails, for Stieler's Planisphere of 1872 has Biene, and an alternative title in France is Abeille [1].




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