• @Cosmos7349
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    907 months ago

    I mean it’s not terrible advice. Alleegies or not, local honey is generally delicious.

      • @[email protected]
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        187 months ago

        Likely because honey has anti-inflammatory properties.

        The local honey myth is about using the honey as a form of allergy immunotherapy since it would be from local pollen.

        • @[email protected]
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          57 months ago

          I thought it would work until I realized I’ve been exposing myself to pollen every damn year as it is. If my body was ever going to get used to it then it would have already lol

          Now I just keep eating the honey because it’s honey, why not? Lol

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            The concept is its very concentrated, but because it’s broken down in the stomach you won’t likely have an allergic reaction. I didn’t know people used honey when they sell bee pollen for the exact purpose.

        • @[email protected]
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          27 months ago

          Has the idea been disproven? I remember well the various flipflopping about toddlers and peanuts

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            That’s different. With peanuts you’re directly ingesting the allergen. With honey you have to hope that enough of the allergen, survived the honey making process, assuming you’re allergic to something bees make honey from.

            There’s no question that allergy immunotherapy is legit, but honey is unlikely to be a viable method of it.

      • @[email protected]
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        147 months ago

        50 - 80g of honey a day?! Allergies are gone hello diabetes!

        Seriously 1g honey to 1kg of body mass is insane. This is obviously ignoring the cost which is also insane.

      • @Smoogs
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        67 months ago

        Yay allergies solved. New problem: diabetes.

        • @JamesTBagg
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          -37 months ago

          A lot of you gluttonous chunkers need to learn the skill of not fucking eating all of it.

          • @Smoogs
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            7 months ago

            Hey don’t get all up in my crank. It’s the study posted that made the conclusion about what it takes for allergen success.

            • @[email protected]
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              67 months ago

              Yeah the study used 1g/kg. So if we use nice round numbers, a 100kg person would be doing 100g of honey or roughly 80g of sugar to start the day. That’s more than a 20oz (568ml) bottle of Coke!

    • sebinspace
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      237 months ago

      Picked up spicy peach honey. Was delicious.

      Then the habaneros came a-knocking.

  • @[email protected]
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    457 months ago

    Same idea as immunotherapy shots or sublingual drops.

    Whether it’s actually local, and if the allergens are actually concentrated enough to make any difference, is a very different question. Set of questions.

    • @Burninator05
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      127 months ago

      Don’t forget this one: Is it actually honey? Honey flavored corn syrup doesn’t help.

      • @[email protected]
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        197 months ago

        I’m guessing this is a US thing? At least I’ve never heard of it before as a european and I’m pretty sure it wouldn’t be allowed to be sold as honey here

        • DarkSirrush
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          77 months ago

          Yeah, us Canadians have to check the label to make sure the honey is Canadian, otherwise its usually 50% corn syrup.

          Another easy tell is if you don’t mix it for a couple months it splits, and all the corn syrup floats to the top.

          • @EpicFailGuy
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            137 months ago

            American here … we’re really sorry. We don’t like it neither; but the corporations, you see? they need their profits.

            • @[email protected]
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              67 months ago

              Another American here … I have literally never seen honey that’s been stepped on.

              What brands do this?

              • @CaptSneeze
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                27 months ago

                Same, and I eat a fair amount of honey. Even when I buy cheap stuff on the road, it’s 100% honey. Maybe there’s some Dollar General store brand that’s severely discounted and cut, but I’ve never seen it.

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            i mean this is solved by not buying imported honey, even here in sweden i can just go on a walk around the area and find at least one person selling honey from their backyard at a perfectly resonable price, so i don’t see the point in buying imported unless you’re a colony of bees in a trenchcoat and need it to survive.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          It is a thing. I think it started with “pancake syrup” being corn syrup with brown color and artifical maple flavor. You know, Big Buttersworth

      • Ech
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        177 months ago

        They said local honey, not factory made junk.

      • Bonehead
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        87 months ago

        I would hope the roadside stand in front of the apiary has real honey and not corn syrup. But you never know…

    • AbsurdityAccelerator
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      77 months ago

      Excuse me? Immunology shots are freaking amazing. I’ve been on them for about 2 years and the difference between last spring and this sptirng is incredible. I no longer need Allegra daily.

      • @mlg
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        67 months ago

        I think he meant for honey. The shots are very specifically concentrated lol.

        Even then honey has some anti inflammatory effect that can help regardless of the added benefit of bee pollen

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        I only did mine for 6 months, but I went from dying every spring to getting a bit sniffly if the pollen count is so high walking outside smells like it. I can’t imagine how effective it would have been if I did all 3 years.

        Fun fact: you can do it with poison ivy. I knew someone who had it done, and he could rub the stuff on his face with no reaction.

  • @[email protected]
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    147 months ago

    Pollution makes my hayfever so much fucking worse.

    Walking down the river, trees, grass, weeds everywhere. Fine.

    Walk to work down busy A-roads, eyes and nose streaming.

    Fuck cars.

  • @NeptuneOrbit
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    137 months ago

    I see lots of competing discussion on whether this is a bs wives tale or not.

    • @[email protected]
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      187 months ago

      The things you are alleegic to aren’t the things bees are making honey out of. We mostly have allergies to things that are broadcast spwaning obscene amounts their pollen like ragweed, mold, and grass, while bees use flowering plants to make their honey.

    • dumples
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      37 months ago

      The hypothesis is that you are eating all of the flower allergens that are causing your allergies. The body usually doesn’t react to things you eat so by consuming those allergens your body does have an immune response since it’s part of food.

      • flicker
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        37 months ago

        This is a fine point because I have oral allergy syndrome, which is my body violently reacting to bananas because of my ragweed allergy and my immune system being dumb as hell.

        But also o do react less to flower pollen with a spoon of local honey a day so maybe it’s just a big weird world we live in.

    • southsamurai
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      17 months ago

      There really aren’t a lot of good studies/experiments done.

      So we’re left with anecdotes. While that’s not totally worthless, it also can’t be conclusive.

    • kbin_space_program
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      07 months ago

      Honey is better for you than refined sugar.

      Also, getting local honey helps limit your carbon footprint and helps out your region economically.

  • @[email protected]
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    17 months ago

    It’s gotta be organic and it’s gotta be local, but it works like magic. A tablespoon a day over winter.

  • @Resonosity
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    7 months ago

    Definitely a shitpost, but please consider other treatments for allergies than honey. Honey bees are domesticated and have a net negative on local environments where they aren’t native, such as North America. And rearing honey bees is not vegan, for those who care about pollinator welfare on both the domesticated and natural sides.

    • THCDenton
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      97 months ago

      Shut the fuck up with that vegan ass advice.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppetM
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        250 minutes ago

        Stop reporting this comment. It’s obviously sarcasm. I am not going to remove it.

      • @Resonosity
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        7 months ago

        Evidence vs coercion. Gotta love Lemmy sometimes.

        Edit: c/whooooosh 😅

        • PaintedSnail
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          117 months ago

          They were very obviously making a joke based on the original picture

          • @Resonosity
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            57 months ago

            Oh haha I see it now, yeah I think this is also a typical Lemmy case of users aka me not reading headlines or posts and only the comments section. :)

    • @[email protected]
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      67 months ago

      alright we doin this okay so most small-time beekepers at least (can’t speak for the larger industrial ones) only rarely resort to providing sugar as a substitute for honey because bees massively overprodice it. Also, the lack of micronutrients is not supported by any literature I can find, and additionally sugar substitution should only occur during the winter regardless. Finally: if bees are being exploited they will just leave. Everything I’ve found indicates that under poor conditions the entire hive will swarm and just go somewhere else. I do think the point about impacting biodiversity is valid, but if that were a decider for whether a food source is vegan there would be a whole lot fewer crops on that list.

      • @Resonosity
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        37 months ago

        My dad is a beekeeper, so I can pretty much confirm what you’re saying about sugar bricks/syrup in the winter. And actually there is some evidence online saying that beekeepers should keep honey in the hives.

        As for migration, many wild bees hibernate, in-place over the winter, and the research regarding wild honey bees, although sparse, seems to suggest the same. Having bees stay in the same hive over the winter isn’t necessarily unnatural.

        On the swarming point, beekeepers try to observe and look out for specific signs of swarming in order to prevent this from happening. And if swarming does happen, beekeepers can set up swarm traps. My dad has done this in the past, and he has had some success.

        The point about all of the above though is that beekeepers 1) intentionally rob the bees of the work (i.e. honey creation) they’ve contributed to over the course of the spring/summer/fall nectar flows, and 2) intentionally try to trap hives that want to escape due to a lack of good conditions - both immoral acts imo.

        And the biodiversity impacts don’t just affect food sources. Honey bees in such high populations that even modest beekeeping operations sustain overcrowd the native populations, capitalizing on nectar resources first, and risk native populations via virus and disease spillover. Native plants often have adapted along with native bees over time such that both species receive/perform pollination activities to 100% effectiveness. Honey bees are generalists, and so while they may pollinate more plants, they may only do so to 75% effectiveness or less (just throwing a number out there). So, plants get pollinated to lesser degrees with honey bees, and the leftover nectar for native bees often isn’t enough to sustain populations meaningfully.

        This is why when people say save the bees, the actual message of the campaign is geared towards native bees - not honey bees. There are capitalistic interests involved in keeping honey bees populations healthy and high to the detriment of local environments.

        • K0W4L5K1
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          37 months ago

          Shits gonna get even more complicated when we prove they have a conscience

    • @[email protected]
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      37 months ago

      Right. Don’t get hives because it’s an imperfect solution so it’s useless. Useless!

      Gotcha.