Aryodi Bee Farm

Aryodi Bee Farm ARYODI Bee Farm trains beekeepers in modern beekeeping rather than traditional practices, allowing farmers to earn a sustainable living wage.

Honey hunting,” the traditional method of gathering honey, involves smoking bees out of their hives with fire and then breaking the hive open. Besides killing bees and destroying the hive, this method makes the beekeeper’s profit on the honey very small. One way to increase profit is to process the honey into a more valuable product, such as honey wine or beeswax, but most beekeepers lack the equi

pment and capital to explore this option. ARYODI Bee Farm trains beekeepers in modern beekeeping, which is less environmentally harmful than traditional practices and up to three times more profitable. After the upfront investment, beekeeping is low-cost and high-production, allowing farmers to earn a sustainable living wage. With over 1,850 farmers trained, and 45 percent of these farmers now earning their living from honey production, ARYODI is on its way to transforming the beekeeping industry in Uganda, where 80 percent of the populations are low-income subsistence farmers. In addition to training, ARYODI provides market to the beekeepers by sourcing honey products from them for value addition and marketing.

We now have bee venom therapy, please make your online orders. 0772168003
28/02/2021

We now have bee venom therapy, please make your online orders. 0772168003

MONEY IN KEEPING BEESYou can actually get between 10kgs for local bee hives and 20 kgs to 30 kgs for KTB and Langstroth ...
13/12/2020

MONEY IN KEEPING BEES

You can actually get between 10kgs for local bee hives and 20 kgs to 30 kgs for KTB and Langstroth bee hives. Within Uganda, the bee hive can be harvested btn 3-4 times yearly, and you only need a small space to set up a mimium of 20 bee hives.

On minimum, you can harvest 300kgs per honey season, by three seasons is 900kgs, each kgs goes for 8,000, you earn 7.2m annually in addition to pollination services and other Diversified products like propolis, bee venom powder etc..

The bee hive life spans is between 10-25ye

Bee keeping is economically viable, it's an enterprise that can impact your livelihood.

Please Contact us at Wimrob Bees Company Limited and Aryodi Bee Farm.

We offer Best Bee Hives, Technical Training, PHH Equipment, Market Linkage and Inspiration.

Please call us on, Tel: 0775126125.

08/12/2020

Planning project implementation, creating schedule and timeline, executing each phase, managing and approving budget, trouble shooting and maintenance, proposal follow up and writing and pitching to key decision makers among others.

02/09/2020

Honey Bee Venom rapidly kills aggressive breast cancer cells.

Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research study finds honeybee venom rapidly kills aggressive breast cancer cells
By Nicolas Perpitch
The research found honeybees were effective at killing breast cancer cells.(ABC News)
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Venom from honeybees has been found to rapidly kill aggressive and hard-to-treat breast cancer cells, according to potentially groundbreaking new Australian research.

Key points:
The research was published in the journal Nature Precision Oncology
It found honeybee venom was effective in killing breast cancer cells
Researchers say the discovery is exciting but there is a long way to go
The study also found when the venom's main component was combined with existing chemotherapy drugs, it was extremely efficient at reducing tumour growth in mice.

Published in the journal Nature Precision Oncology, the research was conducted at Perth's Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research by Dr Ciara Duffy as part of her PhD.

Dr Duffy hopes the discovery could lead to the development of a treatment for triple-negative breast cancer, which accounts for 10 to 15 per cent of all breast cancers and for which there are currently no clinically effective targeted therapies.

She said the honeybee venom had proven extremely potent.

A portrait shot of Ciara Duffy in a lab wearing a white lab coat and smiling at the camera.
Dr Ciara Duffy from Western Australia's Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research has been undertaking the study.(Supplied)
"We found that the venom from honeybees is remarkably effective in killing some of these really aggressive breast cancer cells at concentrations which aren't as damaging to normal cells," Dr Duffy said.

The research showed a specific concentration of the venom killed 100 per cent of triple-negative breast cancer and HER2-enriched breast cancer cells within 60 minutes, while having minimal effects on normal cells.

Bee venom harvested in Perth
Dr Duffy harvested venom from honeybee hives at the University of Western Australia, as well as in Ireland and England.

"Perth bees are some of the healthiest in the world," she said.

The bees were put to sleep with carbon dioxide and kept on ice before the venom was extracted and injected into the tumours.

Dr Ciara Duffy looking through a microscope in a medical lab, wearing blue latex gloves and a white lab coat.
Dr Ciara Duffy said Perth bees were some of the healthiest in the world.(Supplied)
She said a component of the venom called melittin had the killing effect.

The researchers reproduced the melittin synthetically and found it mirrored the majority of the anti-cancer effects of the honeybee venom.

"What melittin does is it actually enters the surface, or the plasma membrane, and forms holes or pores and it just causes the cell to die," Dr Duffy said.

The researchers also discovered within 20 minutes the melittin had another powerful effect.

A beekeeper wearing a protective suit tends to a hive full of honey bees.
The component melittin in the venom is believed to have the killing effect.(ABC News)
"We found it was interfering with the main messaging or cancer-signalling pathways that are fundamental for the growth and replication of cancer cells," she said.

It effectively shut down the signalling pathways for the reproduction of triple-negative and HER2 cancer cells.

'Incredibly exciting discovery', Chief Scientist says
Dr Duffy also examined the effect of melittin used in combination with existing chemotherapy drugs such as docetaxel.

She found the holes in breast cancer membranes caused by the melittin allowed the chemotherapy to enter the cell and worked extremely efficiently in reducing tumour growth in mice.

Peter Klinken smiling, wearing a dark suit and white shirt while standing in front of an Indigenous wall painting.
WA Chief Scientist Peter Klinken said the discovery was "incredibly exciting".(ABC News: Nicolas Perpitch)
Western Australia's Chief Scientist, Professor Peter Klinken, said it was a significant development, which provided another example of where compounds in nature could be used to treat human diseases.

"I think it's incredibly exciting that they've made this observation that the molecule melittin can actually affect the cancer cells, but that it can work in combination with other drugs which come from natural products as well, and in combination they're really knocking these cancer cells on the head," Professor Klinken said.

Dr Duffy did not want to use words like breakthrough or cure, stressing this is just the beginning, and much more research needs to be done.

"There's a long way to go in terms of how we would deliver it in the body and, you know, looking at toxicities and maximum tolerated doses before it ever went further," she said.

Bee venom rapidly kills aggressive breast cancer cells.
01/09/2020

Bee venom rapidly kills aggressive breast cancer cells.

11/06/2020

How safe is the honey you eat? An analysis of local honey brands within EU quality standards

Understanding the safety and quality (in terms of Moisture, HMF, pH, Diastase activity, Free acidity and Electrical conductivity) of locally packaged honey brands and beekeeper honeys in Uganda.

Honey quality is influenced by a swarm of factors related to production, processing, storage, the environment as well as the pollen and nectar sources. Adulteration of honey is a serious issue in global honey trade with significant economic, nutritional and organoleptic consequences. Honey is the third most adulterated food product in the world after milk and the oils.

Honey quality is mainly determined using the physicochemical, sensorial and microbiological characteristics. Honey adulteration is getting complex by the day as its becoming difficult to differentiate between good and bad honey based on physical and sensorial analysis prior to purchase.

While the sensorial properties are perhaps most important for consumers, the chemical properties and their compliance with honey standards are important for accessing national, regional and international markets.

Essential physicochemical qualities of honey accepted globally include measurement of sugar, moisture, electrical conductivity, free acidity, diastase activity and Hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) with their acceptable limits.

Honey sold within the EU and most international markets must comply with these parameters making them important when characterizing honey. Honey samples with correct parameters within the EU honey safety guidelines for instance, are described as ‘Table Honeys’ which means they can be eating directly from the table as sweeteners for tea, porridge, bread spread etc.

However, samples that fall outside the limits are termed as ‘Industrial Honeys’, which means they can only be used as a commodity for industrial use hence fit for use in bakery and other confectionaries.

Domestic markets in Africa has ex

02/05/2020

BENEFITS OF HONEY CONSUMPTION

1. It may help beat hangovers
Fructose speeds up the oxidation of alcohol in the liver. Honey is roughly equal parts glucose and fructose, so it has the potential to cause this reaction. However, studies that looked at honey's ability to increase alcohol metabolism are using about 2 ounces of honey (8 tablespoons) per 25 grams of alcohol, which would be about 480 calories worth of honey. We wouldn't recommend consuming that many calories worth of honey in one day.

2. It contains antioxidants
Some types of honey have been found to contain antioxidants (the darker the honey the more antioxidants it typically contains), which can help fight cell damage that may increase the risk for diseases like cancer, heart disease, etc. However, in order to really pack an antioxidant punch, you'd have to consume more than a teaspoon or two of honey; the American Heart Association recommends that most women consume no more than 25 grams or (6 teaspoons) of total added sugar per day (that's about 100 calories worth). While a teaspoon used here and there can provide a small antioxidant bonus, we'd recommend getting antioxidants from more nutritious sources, like fruits and veggies.

3. It may help fight cancer
Preliminary studies on mice show that some types of honey may inhibit cancer cell growth. So far, studies have only been done in mice, so that can't be translated with certainty to humans.

4. It may help heal your cuts and burns
Some research shows that

24/03/2020

COVID-19 Is Real
Stay Home
Stop The Spread
WillStayAtHome #

We are loading up now for the Harvest Money Expo in Nambole Stadium. Come and learn and enjoy farm products. Body butter...
02/02/2020

We are loading up now for the Harvest Money Expo in Nambole Stadium. Come and learn and enjoy farm products. Body butter made from honey and beeswax will be available, fresh and organic honey.

29/01/2020

For Acholi, Teso and Lango. Main duties is providing extension work, technical tranings to our farmers.

09/12/2019

Bee venom has a compound call Melitin which can destroys Hiv virus, we are now extracting and selling bee venom therapy.

Serious entrepreneurs here you are...
07/10/2019

Serious entrepreneurs here you are...

Address

Po Box 154Doctorsw Village, Oyite Ojok Lane
Lira

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00
Saturday 09:00 - 17:00

Telephone

+256 752 843446

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