BlackDogHoneyBees Profile picture
Feb 16, 2022 10 tweets 3 min read Read on X
How to create a #Thread

1/10

Scroll through to read this, and you'll improve your audience engagement if you understand a simple method of creating a thread, for people to read. Your subject will make more sense, and be easier for people to follow.

#BlackDogHoneyBees 🐝
2/10

When you type, you'll see the + sign, highlight blue. (Bottom Right)
Tap it to add another tweet.
3/10

Then you can type a 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc, and edit each one by tapping the text to make it bold.
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You can also add or remove tweets, in-between tweets, by clicking + to add, or X to remove.
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Try it.

Add tweets. Tag people. Restrict replies. Add images. Save to drafts.
6/10

When you've created your thread, go back through and click each one, to edit it, and add a thread number. 1/7 - 2/7 - 3/7, etc.
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To add an image, click the text in the tweet you want to add the image to, and click on the image folder.
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When you're all done, click to Tweet All. Then, when people read it, it's all in order and easy to read.
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If you want to save it for later, click on the X (Top Left) and choose Save. You'll find it in your drafts folder, on your profile timeline.
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A #Thread makes your topic easier to understand and follow. It's like a short story.
You'll still get notifications when people like, retweet, and comment, but each separate tweet will then create a separate conversation, which is also easier for everyone to follow.

🐝

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More from @BlackDogHoney

Mar 27, 2023
Catching up on news, since we've been away, and this is one of the first tweets to catch our eye!

It would be better to explain how, or why, it is possible to fail an authenticity test, than to promote the failure of all UK tested honey.

So here goes... 1/20

@apimondia
Honey, in England, must comply with the Honey Regulations (England) 2015, and in those Regulations, there are maximum and minimum levels of things to comply with.
Sugar and water content, insoluble particle content, even electrical conductivity of honey, amongst other things.
During winter, before the season, and at the end of the season, it is common for beekeepers to feed their bees a syrup or solid, made from sugar.
The bees can move this feed around the hive and store it.
It is possible for this stored feed to be harvested, if in a honey frame.
Read 21 tweets
Jan 12, 2023
A thread...1/6

I've read the @britishbee petition properly for the first time, today.
We have not signed it, because I don't believe it is helpful to UK honey producers, or bee farmers.

Below ⬇️

It only gives the opinion of the British Beekeeper's Association, on labelling.
⤵️ Image
⤵️ The petition does not ask for anything. It does not state that anything should change. There is no demand. There is no suggestion made.

It has already been satisfied, and here is how.

2/6

⤵️ ImageImage
The Food Standards Labelling and Composition guidance, states that an Alternative statement can be used, to listing the countries of origin, as listing the countries of origin, is already a legal requirement.

The regulations do require countries of origin to be listed.

3/6

⤵️ Image
Read 7 tweets
Dec 6, 2020
#Thread 1/18

You don't only find #SolitaryBees in your #Bee hotel 🐝

Bee hotels should be brought indoors, taken apart, and cleaned before #Winter, to give solitary bees a better chance of survival 🐝

Only buy the type that can be taken apart and cleaned 🐝

#BlackDogHoneyBees ImageImageImageImage
2/18

Carefully take the sections apart, and lay them out on a flat surface.

Be gentle, but don't be afraid to touch the cocoons.

You will see the cocoons in small compartments where the bee built mud walls, to separate each egg, as it was laid in pollen from nearby flowers 🐝 ImageImageImageImage
3/18

Use a soft small brush and gently brush away the soil partitions that separate each cocoon.

You don't have to use a brush, but it makes it easier to clean the dry soil away.

Be careful to not make a mess 🐝 ImageImageImageImage
Read 19 tweets

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