March is Orange Blossom Month
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Season 7 Episode 12: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast – March is Orange Blossom Month
Orange Groves, Honey Bees, and a Vanishing Industry
Orange blossom honey begins in the groves—but those groves are disappearing.
In this episode, beekeeper and writer Ron Miksha explores the history, biology, and quiet decline of North America's citrus landscape. From Florida's once-million acres of orange trees to today's shrinking groves, this is the story of bees, nectar, and a changing agricultural world.
We begin with a simple question: why do oranges grow in groves, not orchards? From there, the episode moves into the ecology of citrus flowers—how they produce nectar, how bees detect scent compounds like linalool and geraniol, and how entire colonies mobilize during bloom.
Along the way, we examine the numbers behind orange blossom honey production, including how a single acre can produce enormous nectar potential—but rarely does. We also look at the realities facing modern citrus: urban expansion, climate pressures, and the devastating effects of citrus greening disease spread by the Asian citrus psyllid.
This episode blends personal experience, ecology, and history—from 1970s Florida bee yards to today's fragmented groves.
It's a story about honey, yes—but also about landscape change, risk, and the uncertain future of beekeeping in citrus country.
Recorded in Calgary, Alberta, Canada in March 2026.
- orange blossom honey
- citrus groves Florida
- honey bees citrus pollination
- how orange blossom honey is made
- citrus bloom beekeeping
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Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Finally: email your questions, comments, and angst: miksha@gmail.com