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** and honey
** local cream kaymak eaten with honey, with a bread pudding ekmek kadayıf, or with pumpkin simmered in syrup.
** Melissae ( honey bees ), likely a subgroup of Oreades or Epimelides
** before fermentation as sugar or honey ( Chaptalization )
** Middle Eastern millet porridge, often seasoned with cumin and honey.
** Atmit, Muk or Adja is a thinner version of Genfo porridge for drinking, mixed often with spiced, clarified butter, milk and honey, or on its own with a pinch of salt.
** " That's right, honey the sacred and the propane " ( i. e., profane )-Carmine Lupertazzi Jr.
** Chè con ong: made from glutinous rice, ginger root, honey, and molasses.
** Hopatcong-" pipe stone " ( NOT " honey waters of many coves " as early 20th-century boosters would have it )
** The honey locust, a leguminous tree with pods having a sweet edible pulp
** Feed royal jelly to the queen larva and drones receive worker jelly for 1 to 3 days at which time they are started on a diet of honey and pollen.
** ( optional ) queen excluder between brood box and honey supers
** 8-10 frames, made of wood or plastic, per hive body or honey super

** and locust
** Kosher locust, an insect considered kosher under Jewish dietary laws
** The black locust ( Robinia pseudoacacia ), a leguminous tree with toxic pods

Gleditsia and triacanthos
The Honey locust, Gleditsia triacanthos, also known as the thorny locust, is a deciduous tree native to central North America.
Honey locusts, Gleditsia triacanthos, can reach a height of 20 – 30 m ( 66 – 100 ft ), with fast growth, and are relatively short-lived ; their life spans are typically about 120 years, though some live up to 150 years.
Thornless forms ( Gleditsia triacanthos inermis ) are occasionally found growing wild and are available as nursery plants.
How this happens is not yet well understood, but current research has recorded by-products of nitrogenase activity in non-nodulating leguminous plants including Gleditsia triacanthos.
Seeds of Gleditsia triacanthos contain a trypsin inhibitor .< ref > Mosolov V. V., Kolosova G. V., Valueva T. A., Dronova L. A. " Trypsin inhibitor from Gleditsia triacanthos L. seeds.
< Ingibitor tripsina iz semian gledichii ( Gleditsia triacanthos L .). Biokhimiia ( Moscow, Russia ).
* Gleditsia triacanthos images at bioimages. vanderbilt. edu
* Gleditsia triacanthos images at Forestry Images
* Gleditsia triacanthos at US Forest Service Silvics Manual
* Gleditsia triacanthos at USDA Plants Database
es: Gleditsia triacanthos
it: Gleditsia triacanthos
pms: Gleditsia triacanthos
* Gleditsia triacanthos L .-Honey locust
Among the trees of the eastern United States, there are two others with similarly large leaves: the Honey locust ( Gleditsia triacanthos ) and the Devil's Walking-Stick ( Aralia spinosa ).
* Honey locust, Gleditsia triacanthos
* Gleditsia triacanthos
* Gleditsia triacanthos
Other specimens include alders ( Alnus ), pecan ( Carya illinoinensis ), hackberry ( Celtis occidentalis ), dogwoods ( Cornus ), ginkgo ( Ginkgo biloba ), thornless honeylocust ( Gleditsia triacanthos var.
The arboretum contains some 320 species of woody plants, including Albizia julibrissin, Buxus microphylla japonica, Campsis radicans, Cercis canadensis, Chilopsis linearis, Cotoneaster lacteus, Cupressus arizonica, Forestiera neomexicana, Fraxinus pennsylvanica, Fraxinus velutina, Ginkgo biloba, Gleditsia triacanthos inermis, Hedera helix, Juniperus communis, Juniperus sabina ' Broadmoor ', Koelreuteria paniculata, Morus alba ' Pendula ', Nandina domestica, Photinia serrulata, Pinus mugo, Pinus nigra, Pinus ponderosa, Pinus sylvestris, Platanus × hispanica, Poa pratensis, Populus canadensis ' Eugenii ', Populus tremuloides, Rhaphiolepis indica, Salix babylonica, Ulmus pumila, Vitex agnus-castus.

Gleditsia and honey
with seeds of the Kentucky coffee tree ( Gymnocladus dioicus ) and honey locust ( Gleditsia triacanthus ), corn, wheat, eastern cottonwood ( Populus deltoides var.

Gleditsia and locust
Gleditsia () is a genus of locust trees in the family Fabaceae, subfamily Caesalpinioideae, native to North America and Asia.
* Gleditsia aquatica Marshall-Water locust

triacanthos and locust
-Texas Honey locust ( G. aquatica × G. triacanthos )

honey and locust
The seed coat in the mature seed can be a paper-thin layer ( e. g. peanut ) or something more substantial ( e. g. thick and hard in honey locust and coconut ).
Despite its name, the honey locust is not a significant honey plant.
Unripe honey locust pods
Honey locusts produce a high quality, durable wood that polishes well, but the tree does not grow in sufficient numbers to support a bulk industry ; however, a niche market exists for honey locust furniture.
The honey locust is popular with permaculturalists across the globe, for its multiple uses.
Although similar in general appearance to the honey locust, it lacks that tree's characteristic long branched spines on the trunk, instead having the pairs of short thorns at the base of each leaf ; the leaflets are also much broader.
Black locust is a major honey plant in eastern USA, and, having been taken and planted in France, is the source of the renowned acacia monofloral honey from France.
Weather conditions can have quite an effect on the amount of nectar collected as well ; in Ohio state for example, good honey locust flow happens in one out of five years.
In addition to prairie grasses, some of which including Big Bluestem ( Andropogon gerardii ) can grow as tall as six feet, the site supports a range of prairie trees, including cottonwoods and honey locust.
-Japanese honey locust
-Chinese honey locust
Most of our current knowledge of the mushroom bodies comes from studies of a few species of insect, especially the cockroach Periplaneta americana, the honey bee Apis mellifera, the locust and the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster.
A second type was made with a paste prepared from honey locust pods, mixed with croton oil, and thinned with water.
The neighborhood has an abundance of coniferous and deciduous trees ; including acacia, blue spruce, cedar, chestnut, elm, honey locust, paulonia, pin and royal oak, sweet gum, sycamore, tulip poplar, yew and many types of pine, some of which reach 75 feet ( 23 m ) or more in height.
The gardens include: an aquatic collection ; butterfly garden and 2, 880 square foot ( 270 m² ) butterfly house featuring pansy exhibits during the winter ; greenhouse for tropical plants ; juniper collection with more than 30 types of junipers ; peony collection of 104 cultivars ; pinetum ; rock garden with sedum and sempervivum ; rose garden with more than 350 rose plants ; sensory garden ; Shakespearean garden ; woodlands with azaleas, dogwoods, elm, hackberry, honey locust, mulberry, osage orange, and redbuds ; and Xeriscape demonstration garden.
* Black locust, a leguminous tree with toxic pods but useful for making honey
The arboretum includes about 1, 000 species of native and exotic woody plants including green ash, crabapple, honey locust, juniper, maple, oak, osage-orange, pine, American sycamore, and black walnut.
* Riparian Woodland-green ash, eastern cottonwood, elm, hackberry, bitternut hickory, silver maple, honey locust, red mulberry, bur aak, osage-orange, sycamore, black walnut, and black willow.

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