PicoBuddy

Boris the Bee Learns to Fly

LLaura
Middle School
Fiction
EN
3 min read
Image for Boris the Bee Learns to Fly

Boris the Bee Learns to Fly

Boris was, to put it mildly, a bee with a problem. A big, buzzing, utterly embarrassing problem. Boris was terrified of flying.

He lived in a hive bustling with activity. Every morning, his fellow bees zipped out, their wings a blur, on missions to gather nectar. Boris would watch them go, a knot of anxiety tightening in his fuzzy little chest. The thought of soaring high above the meadow made his antennae droop. What if he fell? What if he got lost? What if a bird tried to eat him?

Instead of joining the morning rush, Boris busied himself with tasks inside the hive. He polished honeycombs until they gleamed. He organized pollen grains by color. He even tried learning bee-ballet (which, it turned out, involved a lot of awkward buzzing and bumping). Anything to avoid taking to the skies.

One sunny afternoon, a tiny bee named Beatrice wandered off. Beatrice, barely old enough to have a proper buzz, was captivated by a particularly bright yellow flower and, in her fascination, didn't notice she'd drifted away from the hive. She found herself ensnared in a sticky, shimmering spider web, high amongst the blades of grass.

Her panicked buzz reached Boris, who was attempting to alphabetize the hive's collection of dried flower petals. Boris's heart pounded. He knew he had to do something, but the thought of flying… He imagined plummeting like a furry, striped stone.

But then he heard Beatrice's desperate cries again. Boris took a deep breath, then another. He remembered his grandma's words: "Courage isn't about not being afraid, dearie. It's about doing what needs to be done, even when you are."

Boris wiggled his wings, and with a surge of determination (and a tiny squeak of terror), he launched himself into the air. The ground rushed away, and for a moment, Boris’s eyes widened in panic. But then he focused on Beatrice, trapped in the web. He pumped his wings harder, pushing through his fear.

He zipped toward the web and, using his mandibles like tiny scissors, quickly snipped away at the sticky strands. Beatrice tumbled free, grabbing onto Boris's back. Together, they flew back to the hive, Boris’s fear replaced by a warm glow of pride.

From that day on, Boris still felt a flutter of nervousness before flying. But now, he knew he could overcome his fear. He was, after all, Boris, the bee who saved the day – and discovered his own courage along the way.

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Glossary
Antennae:
Feelers on an insect's head.
Mandibles:
Jaws used for biting and cutting.
Nectar:
Sweet liquid produced by flowers.
Hive:
A bee's nest or home.
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About this fiction passage for Middle School

“Boris the Bee Learns to Fly” is a fiction reading passage about Courage, written for Middle School. It takes about 3 minutes to read (418 words) and comes with an interactive quiz and a printable worksheet with comprehension questions and an answer key.

Is this passage free?

Yes. You can read “Boris the Bee Learns to Fly” online for free and download a printable PDF worksheet with comprehension questions and an answer key.

What reading level is “Boris the Bee Learns to Fly”?

It’s written for Middle School — a fiction text about Courage, about a 3-minute read (418 words).

What’s included with this passage?

An illustrated reading passage, a glossary of key terms, comprehension questions with an answer key, and an interactive quiz.

Can I adapt it for my students?

Yes. With a free account you can remix it to a different grade level or translate it to another language in one click.