Skip to main content

Honey Honey

Honey is expensive here in New Zealand and much sought after especially by other countries. On our town's main road there is a honey shop which has a very large 3 storied beehive on one side of the building along with a very iconic kiwi character out the front. 



This is Mr Buzzy Bee. Now just about every kiwi kid has had one of these toys as a toddler, in fact Prince William was given one on a visit with his parents in 1982. The idea is that the bee is pulled along by a string and the wheels make a whizzing sound while the wings turn around and make a clicking noise. The first buzzy bees were made in in about 1940 by Maurice Schlesinger but went out of production after he became unwell with spinal meningitis. Hec Ramsey, a travelling salesman started producing the toy soon after discovering a gap in the market.

I'm interested to know if anyone else grew up with Mr Buzzy Bee.

Linking up with Our World TuesdayThrough my lensTuesday TreasuresMy corner of the world and Wordless Wednesday.

Comments

Billy Blue Eyes said…
There are a few places around our village sell local honey which I have often thought about buying, like NZ it is quite expedience. Mind you Rowse Honey have a factory in the next town and they sell all over the world
NCSue said…
Love that little bee!
Thanks so much for sharing at https://image-in-ing.blogspot.com/2021/11/autumn-beaty-remembered.html
Fun60 said…
Honey is very popular here. A number of buildings in the city have beehives on the top of them.
Lydia C. Lee said…
Our neighbours gave us some honey! They have a hive. #OurWorldTuesday
I live in the USA and honey is available at many stores. I buy a local honey when I can find the one I like. The little bee is really cute.
Bill said…
How cute is Mr. Buzzy Bee. We hardly ever have honey, my wife doesn't care for it and I haven't had any since I was a kid and had a cold. My mother used to mix lemon and honey for our sore throats. I believe it worked well with us too.
William Kendall said…
I occasionally buy some honey.
Mr. Buzzy Bee is so cute. I could imagine playing with a toy like that as a kid. - Margy
Shiju Sugunan said…
Cute Buzzy Bee! Honey is always a reminder of how much hard work goes towards its production.
Tom said…
...I think that as a kid I had one of these pull toys. Thanks Amy for sharing this sweet post! Keep on buzzing and enjoy your week.
We have a lot of local honey places here.
local alien said…
I'm fascinated by those buzzy bees. I don't remember them when I was a child. They're so cute
local alien said…
Ps wish I could taste some real NZ honey again. A taste of its own
I do not "bee-lieve" I had that sweet buzzy bee, but we (and our kids) did grow up with wooden pull toys.
thomas said…
interesting sweet place
Veronica Lee said…
Love that cute buzzy bee!

Happy Weds, Amy!

Iris Flavia said…
Very cute. Look at today´s toys... they bling and make noise all by their boring self.
ratnamurti said…
My 2 eldest, now 50-ish had a buzzy bee, and even my youngest grandchild, a toddler, has one. Iconic.
Terra said…
That buzzy bee sculpture is cute; I have seen buzzy bee like pull toys, but not an actual buzzy bee toy. Those toys are better than the current crop of plastic batteries required in my opinion.
Veronica Lee said…
Hi again, Amy!

You asked in your comment if the fruit in my post was Tamarillo. It is ambarella aka June plum in Sri Lanka and golden apple in the Carribean.

Have a great weekend!

Popular posts from this blog

Auckland Metropolis Museum

In amongt the modern new highrise buildings in Auckland City is this smaller vintage building that is currently for sale (I'd buy it if I had the money).   My research found that:  "It was designed by English-born architect Charles Towle and erected in the early 1930s as the Church of Christ, Scientist, the building's Graeco-Roman facade has towering columns that frame its impressive entranceway, with three ornate timber doors decorated with leadlight inserts providing access to the expansive foyer. Arched ceilings dominate the former congregational high stud space beyond the foyer and numerous picturesque windows provide a light, airy feel and an ambience many office buildings lack. The building housed congregational and Sunday school services for 70 years until it was sold and converted into office space in 2003. A significant refurbishment was also carried out with care taken to ensure that the building's distinctive character remained intact. Special architectural ...

Family

  Photo taken Spring 2024 in Auckland We have been invited to a family reunion in June 2026 which will be held in Auckland so I'm looking forward to catching up with relatives that I haven't seen in over 10 years.  This week we have: Had a good chat with a friend who has also adopted a rescue dog - must arrange a play date. I've bought some non alcoholic liqueurs to mix up for mocktails which have been very nice as I don't really drink. We had a massive wind storm 2 days ago, we were ok but a good friend who lives 20 minutes away had a bolt of lightning strike her house, the result was a blown up power box inside and part of her kitchen got burned, she had to call out the fire brigade to put it out. And I have a question for you; when you add your blog post to a blog meme or a blog link up, do you expect the owner of that blog to at least come back and comment on the other blogs that have linked up to it including yours even if it's only occasionally?  I actually th...

Hail

  Spring is throwing out some strange weather right now. We don't get snow where we live but it is visible on some of the mountains around us over Winter. Last week around 4.30am we had a very loud thunderstorm with hail. It wasn't until an hour or so later my daughter said this is what she saw out on our deck.  Clumps of hail all over the deck and on her hand. Apparently various other suburbs around town got it too. Linking up with  Through my lens ,  Tuesday Treasures ,  My corner of the world ,  Wordless Wednesday .