„Busy Beeee!“ – An Adventure Exhibition for the Entire Family
Your venue changes into a giant beehive, and invites its visitors to an exciting and adventurous tour with the interactive exhibition "Busy Beeee!". More than 600 m² (6,000 sqft) focus solely on these precious friends and their importance for mankind, nature and environment. Honey bees are not only busy honey producers, but are in particular, for nature as pollinators of inestimable value. Visitors of all ages are offered a unique journey of discovery, and amongst many other experiences, perceive an impression of a beekeeper standing in a swarm of bees or gain knowledge on how exhausting it is to imitate the flapping of the wings of a bee. With this, the bee’s astonishing achievements become very clear to all. „This adventurous exhibition is ideal for the entire family and offers visitors of all ages interesting background information and playful learning areas for children from 3 to 12 years of age, besides of having lots of fun“ Christoph Rahofer, president of EMS EXHIBITS, explains. Time flies (like a bee) at your VENUE whether by walking the exhibition or drawing at the bee’s painting corner, watching a movie at the bee’s theatre, or tasting honey, maybe crafting your own candle. And for the busiest bees amongst visitors, bee’s sticker albums are offered for sticker collection and exchange.
The bee does not go upright on two legs, has no hair on its head and does not collect pollen in small pots.
Children know bees and bee-stings – but how is their knowledge about the bee’s life in the beehive? Do they know about the noteworthy equipment of the working bee or do they know how bees produce honey? The exhibition "Busy Beeee!" answers all these questions!
Especially for school classes and kindergarden children the exhibition offers a load of exciting things to discover and experience. Free teaching material is available, as well as guided tours with bees’ experts throughout the exhibition.
Did you know that …
… bees approach 30 blossoms per minute and that they always seek the same flower kind?
… up to 80% of all blossoms are pollinated by bees? Only approx. 20% are dusted by wasps, bumblebees and forest bees.
… the bee’s eyes consist of about 4,000 to 5,000 single eyes?
… the bees are red-blind, however, see ultraviolet instead?
… the bees use body language with differing dances on the honeycomb in which distance, direction and food source is being conveyed?
… the bees, while flying use the altitude of the sun and ground for orientation purposes?
… a colony of bees consists of 1 queen, approx. 60,000 working bees and 500 drones?
… the drones only live from May to August in the beehive and their only job is mating the queen?
… that bees can track explosives?
… that bees could probably even exist on Mars?


Busy Beeee!


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