i am meeting yonca tokbas, a bee expert, to find out more about these intriguing insects and how theyne honey. yonca, hello! hello! she has dedicated herself to preserving the bees�* way of life, even running ultra marathons for her bee—focused cause. what a beautiful forest. this is a healthy forest. you get the smell and the sound of the forest. this is the bug. that tiny little thing there?! yep! it is taking the sap from the pine tree, then creating this liquid — can you see that? and that is what the bee is taking from the pine tree. that tiny, tiny, tiny animal that you have so much difficulty seeing is the magic creator of the whole process. more than half of these essential grubs were wiped out by the fires. if you don't have this insect, you do not have food for bees and you don't have the pine honey. with natural food sources dwindling and many hives destroyed, yonca warns that some honey producers are putting too much pressure on the remaining bees. we encourage their sicknesses like treating them with chemicals or trying to feed them unnatural sugary stuff so they can prod