Bitter flavour of honey: ?ragwort

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Amari

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The honey I took off in late August has a slightly bitter after-taste which was not present in the spring crop. There was a fallow field with many ragworts near my out apiary. I seem to remember reading that ragwort can explain a bitter taste. Can anyone confirm this please?
 
St. John's wort and ragwort are not the same plant, or even from the same family, although they can be potentially toxic and leave a bitter aftertaste. The curious thing is that Google Translate does consider it.
 
I remove ragwort anywhere in my area, as far as I was aware it is supposed to be a controllable weed for farmers. Enforcement is unlikely as local authorities have let it grow completely out of control and would require them to serve notices on themselves. Terrible weed
 
I remove ragwort anywhere in my area, as far as I was aware it is supposed to be a controllable weed for farmers. Enforcement is unlikely as local authorities have let it grow completely out of control and would require them to serve notices on themselves. Terrible weed
The pollinators you see on just one flower is busy our council have left it on the road margins in places good on them, this In turn has helped other wild flowers clover dandelions campanula hog weed willow herbs etc
 
The pollinators you see on just one flower is busy our council have left it on the road margins in places good on them, this In turn has helped other wild flowers clover dandelions campanula hog weed willow herbs etc
I was going to name a few then I found this in The Guardian. Written beautifully.....

Among the butterflies there are commas, red admirals, meadow browns, common blues, gatekeepers, small heaths and large skippers, their flight a folding-unfolding origami in the air.

Cinnabar Moth caterpillars, like items of lost games kit – a sock, a sleeve – in wasp-stripe warnings of toxicity feed on ragwort leaves. A fantasia of hoverflies, robber flies, solitary bees, bumblebees and beetles feed on ragwort pollen and nectar.

A Harvestman Spider – a full-stop on improbably spindly legs – hunts ragwort visitors, as do the house martins swooping above. A flattened patch is evidence of a deer lay-up; and dusk will be batty with nocturnal tribes. There is more life in one acre of ragwort than a hundred surrounding arable fields.
 
Ragwort overtakes everything to the detriment of other previously established flowers. The effect on cattle and horses health is not good
Not good = bloody fatal for some. It strikes a bit close to home when a friend's horse has to be put down by the vet following ragwort poisoning.
 

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