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Just thinking about “mad honey” for some reason

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Image 1: Honey bees in northern Turkey (source)
Image 2: Bee hives in northern Turkey (source)
Image 3: “Deli bal” - the Turkish variety of “mad honey” (source)
Image 4: Town in northern Turkey where honey is an important industry (source)

Deli bal - Hallucinogenic Turkish honey

An excerpt from Emma Bryce’s Modern Farmer piece on mad honey:

The dark, reddish, “mad honey,” known as deli bal in Turkey, contains an ingredient from rhododendron nectar called grayanotoxin — a natural neurotoxin that, even in small quantities, brings on light-headedness and sometimes, hallucinations. In the 1700s, the Black Sea region traded this potent produce with Europe, where the honey was infused with drinks to give boozers a greater high than alcohol could deliver.

When over-imbibed, however, the honey can cause low blood pressure and irregularities in the heartbeat that bring on nausea, numbness, blurred vision, fainting, potent hallucinations, seizures, and even death, in rare cases. (…)

“There are more than 700 different species [of rhododendron] in the world, but according to our knowledge just two or three include grayanotoxin in their nectars,” says SÁ¼leyman Turedi, a doctor at the Karadeniz Technical University School of Medicine in Trabzon, Turkey, who studies deli bal‘s effects and has witnessed more than 200 cases of mad honey poisoning. (…)

Although the product makes up only a tiny percentage of the Black Sea’s honey production, it’s long held a strong Turkish following. “People believe that this honey is a kind of medicine,” Turedi says. “They use it to treat hypertension, diabetes mellitus and some different stomach diseases. And also, some people use deli bal to improve their sexual performance.” (…)

The honey is taken in small amounts, sometimes boiled in milk, and consumed typically just before breakfast, he adds — not slathered on toast or stirred generously into tea the way normal honey would be. Its value to customers has given beekeepers an incentive to keep visiting those rhododendron fields and producing it alongside their normal honey products. (…)

Indeed, in 67 B.C. Roman soldiers invaded the Black Sea region under General Pompey’s command, and those loyal to the reigning King Mithridates secretly lined the Romans’ path with enticing chunks of mad honeycomb. The unwitting army ate these with gusto, as the story goes. Driven into an intoxicated stupor by the hallucinogenic honey, many of the flailing soldiers became easy prey, and were slain.

– From Emma Bryce. “The Strange History of ‘Mad Honey.’“ In Modern Farmer, 4 September 2014.

Here’s a view of the rhododendron species that provides the local Turkish honey bees with the chemical source for mad honey:

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The species is Rhododendron ponticum (image source). The flower is the source of the grayanotoxin that gives mad honey its intoxicating effects.

Notice how lush and humid this region is. The “Black Sea littoral zone” is a very narrow strip of land that runs along the Black Sea coastline in northern Turkey. The sea helps to moderate the area, so that the ecoregion is a highly-localized microclimate and is much more mild and wet than the rest of Turkey and the Caucasus, which are often defined by semi-arid or barren steppe.

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Mad honey from the Gurung people of the Himalaya

There’s also another famous “mad honey” from near the Annapurna Massif in central Nepal.

This mad honey, like its Turkish counterpart, is also made by bees using rhododendron, and also gains its hallucinogenic and intoxication properties from grayanotoxin.

In these steep valleys near the southern edge of the Himalaya beneath the peak of Annapurna, giant honey bees often keep their honey elevated at dramatic heights on cliff faces.

Take a look at some nice shots from a 2016 Vice documentary. (Image credit might best be attributed to the documentary’s cinematographer Igor Kropotov)

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This Nepalese honey is harvested by Gurung people living in the nearby valleys.

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For context.

Here’s where Turkish deli bal honey is produced.

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The reason that honey bees can use the proper rhododendron species is because both the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea create narrow strips of land with fertile, marine-climate temperate forest. These regions are known as “the Black Sea littoral” forest and the “Caspian littoral” forest. These fertile regions stand in stark contrast to the semi-arid steppe and arid deserts that surround the region.

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The Nepalese mad honey is produced at the abrupt Himalayan slope near Annapurna in central Nepal.

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+5 for Kurdish recognition.

I want to try some.

workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 19 March 1856, stonemasons in Sydney, Australia, achieved the 8-hour work day. It was one of the earliest such victories in the world, and spurred further working class protest for a reduction in the length of the...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 19 March 1856, stonemasons in Sydney, Australia, achieved the 8-hour work day. It was one of the earliest such victories in the world, and spurred further working class protest for a reduction in the length of the working day elsewhere in Australia and around the world.
Pictured: an 8-hour banner in Melbourne that year
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radicalarchive:
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radicalarchive:

Donnelly/Colt Buttons, Hampton, Connecticut, [late 1980’s].

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