bee health · beekeeping · bees, pollinators, beekeeping, environment · natural cures · nature

Small Actions/Great Love

Photo by Debbie Orme


When people read dystopian books or articles about the changing environment, do they change their ways and better respect Mother Earth? Should the public be made aware of all the dire scenarios climate change presents? Or do predictions about a dark future cause people to lose hope and surrender to passivity?

Climate writers have been debating this. Writers who concentrate on environmental topics hoped to gin up compassion for our planet and for the populations most affected by global weirdness. But now those writers ask themselves whether they have scared readers into despondency.

Some propose a different approach. To write “hopeful dystopia.” They look to the butterfly affect for inspiration. Their imaginary characters or the real people they write about will make small changes that if widely adopted would help avert the worse consequences of climate change.     


Beekeepers have held that view for a while. They acknowledge the serious decline of bees and what that means for humankind, while pleading with the public to make small, personal changes that will help stop the losses. These changes can be adopted with little inconvenience, and if multiplied, make a significant difference.


Folks can designate a portion of yard to dandelions. Or they can lift the mower blade in spring to allow dandelions to flourish when bees need them most.


They can sign on to No Mow May. Communities and countries who practice this have seen a return of beneficial insects.  


Concerned people can sign petitions and write representatives, urging them to ban neonics, a family of chemicals used in pesticides. These harmful chemicals weaken or kill bee colonies and are harmful to humans, too. The EU and other countries have banned them; some US states have.


Gardeners can favor pollinator-friendly flowers over ornamentals that don’t benefit bees and butterflies. And native plant species generally support all insects better.  


What can those who live in apartments or rental homes do? Place planters with beneficial flowers in entryways, balconies, and even on rooftops.


We must teach kids to respect bees and learn to coexist with them. A couple of years ago someone posted a story on Facebook about kids who sprayed a bee swarm with a garden hose. An adult tried to save the wet bees by placing them in a dry, sunny place, but the bees died. The kids may have thought they were destroying dangerous insects. Bees can sting, but mostly go about their important work of pollinating and creating a honey supply for winter. Wasps, hornets, and yellow jackets act more aggressively, and bees often get the blame for stings they inflict.  


Mother Teresa left us good advice. “It’s not about doing big things; it’s about doing small things with great love.” Benjamin Franklin said, “Little strokes fell big oaks.”

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We Can Reverse Insectageddon

On my first date, a boy took me to a movie. His dad drove us, and his little brother, age 8, came along.

The movie featured a villainous giant spider with hairy legs and hideous fangs. I had hoped my date would hold my hand, but he couldn’t. My hands covered my eyes. Little Brother dove under his seat and hid.


Periodically, a movie, book, or article predicted a future where fragile humans would cede their dominance to durable insects, usually creepy ones.    

That forecast hasn’t come true. Instead, insects have declined precipitously and some species have gone extinct. Even scientists who disagree with the idea of an insect apocalypse don’t dispute the losses. They argue that we have not identified all insect species because they are so numerous, so we don’t have the entire picture.


But we know about bees and butterflies, and the loss of birds who depended on insects for their diet. That is well-documented.    


Harmful chemicals, urban encroachment and habitat loss, intensive farming and climate change all play a role in insect decline, and harm for the plants and animals who depend on them.

These problems feel overwhelming. But a 2007 book, Nature’s Best Hope—A New Approach to Conservation That Starts in Your Yard, became a bestseller by telling readers they could bring back the insects and birds. The author, Douglas Tallamy, an entomologist, urged people to convert their yards from lawns to native plants.


Tallamy had an ambitious proposal. If every American converted half of their lawn to native plants, it would restore 20 million acres of ecological wasteland. That would comprise the country’s largest park system.


Native plants advocates tell us that soil and weather conditions give those plants an edge over nonnative grasses and plants. And nourish birds and other species.   
But as someone trying to convert a large section of lawn to native plants, I have seen that grass doesn’t surrender territory without a long, bitter fight. And sadly, nonnative weeds also can push aside beneficial plants.


I have planted species known to be aggressive that lost out to grass and invasive weeds. The past few years have shown me which native plants will hold their own in my yard against grass and intrusive plants. Yet, grown at a neighbor’s place, those same plants might struggle.


In hindsight, it might have been better to experiment with small areas that I could monitor before trying to convert a large chunk of property. 

  
Converting half of U.S lawns stands as a great goal. But to people who can’t conceive of yards without border-to-border green lawn, it sounds radical. If each of us would convert just a section of property, we could help bees, butterflies, and the birds that we love, and overcome our feeling of helplessness.


Legions of people rent houses and apartments and have no say over the grounds where they live. Those folks can advocate for native plants in public spaces, and plant beneficial plants in pots to place on balconies and porches.     


Here is the National Wildlife Federation web site for advice on native plants: http://www.nwf.org/NativePlantFinder.

bee health · beekeeping · bees, pollinators, beekeeping, environment · natural cures · nature

The Cassandra Effect and Bees

Cassandra, the King of Troy’s beautiful daughter, turned the head of the god Apollo. Wanting to impress her, Apollo bestowed on her the gift of prophecy. But she wouldn’t have him, and he cursed her. She could see the future, but no one would believe her.
The gift brought her misery. Foreseeing death and chaos, she warned the people of Troy not to open the city gates to a giant wooden horse, a gift from the Greeks. No one heeded her. Greek soldiers who hid inside the horse sacked and pillaged Troy.
The myth expresses a truth we see played out in real life. We humans don’t like dire news and turn a deaf ear to it. Some want to dismiss the latest figures about the decline of bees. The report says that over 60 percent of bee colonies were lost during the last year.
 “No way,” some cry. Losses during the past two decades sometimes reached as high as 50 percent, which was alarming enough. But organizations like the National Resource Defense Council and the Department of Agriculture stand by the disturbing new figures.

Of course people want to disbelieve. Three-quarters of our key food crops depend on bees and other pollinators. Experts tell of a general insect apocalypse, and we don’t miss some bugs. But we recognize our dependence on pollinators.
Many factors contribute. Climate change means more extreme weather. Too hot, too cold, too rainy, too dry. Flowers may bloom too early or too late for emerging bees. Loss of habitat factors in. Development means loss of native plants species. Monoculture—huge tracts of land given over to one crop—means bees don’t get the variety of blooms they need.
Varroa mites menace hives, and bees weakened by chemicals can’t overcome them.     
The bee industry cannot understand why the U.S. allows neonics, a family of chemicals that have been banned in the EU and many other countries. Study after study confirms that neonics, present in agrochemicals, harm bees, wild and domestic. A strong corporate lobby defeats attempts to stop their use.
The decline in bee health should raise other alarms. A body of evidence shows that neonics pose health hazards for humans, including threats of neurological and developmental damage to children, especially those exposed in the womb. The chemicals remain in the soil and don’t dissipate.
We wish awful statistics and the gloomy people who present them would go away. But Cassandra shows us. We should listen to prophets.     

bee health · beekeeping · bees, pollinators, beekeeping, environment · natural cures · nature

Beekeeping and Longevity

Even before I kept bees, I loved to stand next to a tree in bloom and listen to bees buzz.
 
 One time when I was walking with a friend, we spotted a yellow-flowered canola field ahead. Before we reached the field, we heard bees working the blooms. We paused there for a long time, savoring the sound of loud, ambitious bees. I sensed it was healing. And it may have been.  
 
Some say the hypnotic sound of bees humming may be good for human health. And that is only one way that hanging around with bees improves well-being.  A new report validates the old belief that beekeepers live longer than other people.   
 
Several factors combine to make beekeeping healthy. The outdoor lifestyle includes walking and gardening. Beekeepers have an absence of pollutants in the bee yard. They eat honey, and some of them also consume royal jelly and bee pollen.  
 
There are claims that bee stings in moderation can be beneficial. This belief says bee venom acts to ease arthritis pain. Studies to determine whether this is true are in the works.  
 
A recent study showed that telomere length, generally accepted as a way to estimate longevity, is greater in people who practice beekeeping. Telomere length, a complex hereditary trait, has been associated with aging and age-related diseases including cancer. Beekeepers live longer than nonbeekeepers, and beekeepers exhibit longer telomeres. Specifically, male beekeepers display significantly longer telomere lengths than their non-beekeeping counterparts.
 
The study conducted in Malaysia involved a small number of people, all men. Thirty healthy beekeepers who had kept bees for more than five years, and thirty healthy nonbeekeepers. None were on medications. The nonbeekeepers did not consume bee products—honey, royal jelly, or pollen—the beekeepers did. Researchers believed that may have played a part in the beekeepers’ greater telomere length—honey has antimicrobial, antiviral, antiparasitic, anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties.
 
These days, some beekeeper/entrepreneurs offer others the chance to hang around bees to absorb the health benefits. Spas and B &Bs offer guests the opportunity to meditate or sleep close to hives, while staying separate from the bees. Such places exist in the U.S., Europe, and Australia.
 
 
 

bee health · beekeeping · bees, pollinators, beekeeping, environment · natural cures · nature

Those Wise Mayans

We believe we are clever with our high-powered microscopes and telescopes, brain mapping and gene splicing, and advanced machinery. It surprises us when we learn that some ancient societies came to understand a lot, also.

The Mayan priestly caste shuttered itself indoors in the daytime so they could strengthen their night vision. From temple heights they studied the sky, learned to predict eclipses of the sun and moon, and planted their crops according to the position of the planets.

What else did they know? Recent archeological finds confirm that beekeepers played an important role in Mayan culture. The people who lived in the Yucatan Peninsula considered honey to be sacred and harvested it from the jungle. Honey became their main product for trade, and the heart of religious rituals.

Modern researchers recognize honey’s antimicrobial and antioxidant properties. They hope it can help replace antibiotics that no longer work for us. The Mayans applied honey to external wounds and consumed it to ease stomach complaints.

Tools used for beekeeping dominated the new cache Mexican archeologists unearthed. Scientists will analyze the 261 artifacts to learn more about Mayan life, but the team recognized them as beekeeping tools. They included hollowed-out logs that housed the bees, limestone lids used to cap the logs, vases to hold the honey, and axes and hammers. 

Mayans cultivated the Melipona bee native to that area, and considered it sacred. Many of their religious rites revolved around the bee. Indigenous beekeepers of that area today use similar tools and methods, and the same species of bee for honey production. 

Which culture looks wiser? The one from fifteen hundred years BCE, where people celebrated bees as sacred and used honey to remedy internal and external medical problems? Or our modern culture where numbers of people consider bees a nuisance to be slapped and sprayed, and think that it is okay to ravage their habitat with deadly chemicals?    

bee health · beekeeping · bees, pollinators, beekeeping, environment · nature

Insect Apocalypse

A visit to a Montreal insectarium awakened in me something that went dormant decades ago. Affection for bugs.

When I was a child, a nearby creek in a cow pasture held numbers of water skippers. I lay in the grass and watched them. Graceful dragonflies hovered above the water, but I kept my eye on them because a neighbor kid had told me they used their tapered abdomens to take stitches in human skin. (Not true.)

At the Montreal museum, kids sat mesmerized while a parade of leaf-cutter ants carried green and pink leaf slivers across a log. Shiny beetles with blue and red fluorescent stripes attracted admirers, and adults and kids alike froze when a butterfly flew near, hoping it would light on them and bring them good luck.  

Globally, the insect population declines each year because of deforestation, pesticides, light pollution, and climate change. People who never liked bugs anyway need not see this as good news. Bugs undergird the food chain—reptiles, birds, and mammals rely on them for food.  A yellow jacket feeds a blackbird who feeds a red fox who feeds a majestic hawk. Insects tether all freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems in the world, and humans need pollinators in their gardens and orchards. 

Fireflies who once blinked on when darkness came have vanished from many of their home regions. The plight of migrating butterflies and honey bees is well-publicized.  

Around the globe, insects pollinate more than 75 percent of crops. In the US, insects perform services estimated at $57 billion per year. Dung beetles alone are worth $380 million per year to the US cattle industry because they break down manure and churn range land soil.

This doesn’t refute that some insects are creepy. At one display, I strained to see insects but saw only twigs, some nine or ten inches long. Then a big twig moved. I would hate to pick up a twig and discover it was a giant insect in camo.

Not everyone agrees that insect populations are in decline. Some insect populations are growing. Unfortunately, the ones increasing in number are mostly pests.

Can the average person do something to help beneficial insects? Yes.

Favor native plants over ornamentals. A rabbit brush plant supports 37 different species of insects, including honey bees.

Reduce or eliminate yard lights.  

Seek natural methods to control destructive insects. If none are available, find commercial products that target the harmful actors.  

Instead of mowing and weed whacking around trees, leave mounds of grass and leaves. When insects and their larvae fall out of trees, they will have a place to thrive.   

Postpone mowing grass until late spring. This helps insects at a crucial time, and contributes to lawn health. Many communities observe no-mow March or no-mow May, depending on when spring comes to their area. Those communities have significantly increased their pollinator populations.  

bee health · beekeeping · bees, pollinators, beekeeping, environment · natural cures · nature

Where Have All the Insects Gone?

Ladybugs occupied my 125-year-old farmhouse before I did.

During cold months, they cluster in ceiling corners, and when it warms they march across the kitchen ceiling or dance on the keyboard in my office while I type. Sometimes, one falls into my tea. 

I don’t know if a previous resident invited them in, or if the ladybugs discovered this snug home on their own. Small as they are, when one falls on my head it goes boink, and startles me. At first, if I found a ladybug strolling across the stove or asleep on the bread board, I would move her to a house plant. I don’t anymore. We co-exist.    

We humans are inconsistent. We love butterflies, bees, praying mantis, dragonflies and ladybugs. Other insects annoy us, and we actively hate fleas, roaches, mosquitoes and bedbugs. If I had inherited ordinary insects, they would be gone. But ladybugs have a good name. They are a symbol of good luck in some cultures, and the friend of gardeners in our section of the world.

I have no idea what my house ladybugs eat. I never see them land on house plants or on the vegetables and fruit in the produce basket. Outside in the garden, they feed on pests like aphids, and they throng to my raspberry patch.  

Entomologists know that insects play a vital role in the ecosystem, but science hasn’t studied them to the extent that mammals, birds, and reptiles have been observed. So we have to estimate how much their numbers have declined.    

Some of us remember car trips when we had to stop to clean insects off the windshield so we could see. We know pollinators are in trouble because scientists and food growers watch them closely. Lately, the decline of insects has gained attention across the world.  

The causes of the decline are the same as those that have harmed pollinators. Loss of habitat, pesticide use, particularly insecticides, intensive agriculture, invasive species, and climate change. Science has begun to consider light pollution as a factor, too.     

Studies on insect numbers have come mostly from Europe and the United States, though those countries have only 20 percent of the world’s insects. Those numbers estimate that land insects are declining by 9 percent a year. Some fresh water insects have increased in numbers, maybe because of clean-up in lakes, but they account for a smaller number of species. Some species have gone extinct, while others are heading toward that.   

Entomologists working on six continents estimated in 2019 that on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being the worst, the severity of the insect crisis is 8–10.

Next time:  Insectogedden

bee health · beekeeping · bees, pollinators, beekeeping, environment · natural cures · nature

Do Bees Welcome Strangers?

Photo by Roland Prakel-Close-up of a queen bee

Bees face many perils. The ones we humans have introduced into their lives, like deadly chemicals and loss of healthy habitat, and ones that Nature puts in their path. Bees have enemies small and large, and must be vigilant.

Two years ago, during an especially brutal winter, mice invaded my hives and made a disgusting mess, as well as destroying a colony. Beekeepers install mouse guards to prevent such disasters, but I had become complacent because my type of hive sits high above the ground. I’ve gone back to using mouse guards.  

Bears broke through a regular fence and smashed my daughter-in-law’s hives. She and my son bought a heavy-duty, electrified fence that would repel bears. They gave up beekeeping a year or two later because flowers in their area disappear in midsummer. The fence guards chickens now.

Skunks and raccoons also invade hives. Wasps do too. It appears inconsistent—how much beekeepers value one variety of insect, and loath another. The enemy of my friend is my enemy. Like many others, I have lost a hive to wasps. And one time, I interrupted an invasion.

Spiders can prey on bees, so I remove the icky, sticky webs that jumping spiders make on the edges of combs, though I suppose the spiders wouldn’t cause great harm.       

If a hive loses its queen and the beekeeper buys a replacement, the beekeeper introduces the new queen to the colony with tact, allowing time for adjustment. Older bees may be reluctant to accept a newcomer.  

In spring, when people buy new bees, the bees arrive in one of two ways. In an established colony, where the queen and workers know each other and the queen is already at work. Or, in a nuc (nuclear colony) where the queen is in a cage, and will be released after the workers get acquainted with her. In cold climates, where summer is short, the nuc loses days in the adjustment period, whereas an established colony goes right to work. But nucs are less expensive. And people like me, who run an atypical style of hive, must choose nucs.

When the nuc arrives, workers already surround the queen cage. It appears the workers like the queen and are protecting her. But the beekeeper must look closer. Maybe the workers want to get to the queen to kill her. It’s all about scent, we’re told.

After a few-day period of observation, the beekeeper releases the queen. Fumbles may occur during this action. One time I dropped the queen in the grass. A friend who was helping spotted her, carefully picked her up, and deposited her in the hive.   

Bees resemble us in the way they accept a newcomer. When a new neighbor arrives, we grumble. Their new house blocks our favorite view. We liked the old neighbor and wish they hadn’t moved. The new neighbor owns a peacock, whose raucous call awakens us in the mornings.   

Then one day, the new neighbor shows up at our door with a warm loaf of good-smelling bread. In chatting together, we discover we attended the same college. Our kids ran track together. The new neighbor has an adorable dog. We see the potential for friendship.

Like a queen bee, the new neighbor gets incorporated into the colony/neighborhood.

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Finally! Good news for bees.

We who love bees grow weary of incessant bad news about declining bee health. Positive news from the apian world gives some relief as we step into a new year.   

In 2024, Vermont became the latest state to crack down on agricultural use of neonic pesticides. Neonics, a class of chemicals, wreaks havoc on bee populations and has been banned in Europe.

The new Vermont law restricts widespread use of seeds coated with the neurotoxic chemical. The National Resources Defense Council (NRDC) says a single neonic-coated corn seed contains enough active ingredients to kill a quarter million bees. A high percentage of the pesticide coating leaches into the environment to contaminate soil, water, native plants, and wildlife.  

New York’s Birds and Bees Protection Act, passed in 2023, restricts agricultural use of certain neonic pesticides. It went into effect in July, 2024. The act aims to protect pollinators and the environment, and promote sustainable agriculture.  

In March, 2024, Washington became the 11th state to restrict residential use of neonics, joining California, Colorado, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.

At year’s end, Washington State and the US Department of Agriculture announced that murder hornets had been eradicated.  

The giant, Asian hornets were first reported in North America on Vancouver Island, Canada, and later spotted in Washington. Teams began to target and eliminate hornets’ nests. The public cooperated by reporting hornet sightings. Officials believe the hornets never migrated out of Washington. 

Scientists used dental floss to attach tiny radio trackers to live hornets and then follow them back to their nests. Outfitted like astronauts, teams in protective gear arrived to eliminate the nests. Officials credit the alert public with helping them identify and find the insects.  

The insects known as “slaughter hornets” for the way they mount a group attack, posed a serious threat to honeybees. Hornets can wipe out an entire hive in minutes, even though honeybees bravely fight back. A researcher recorded the panic inside a hive when giant hornets arrived. It sounded like screaming.

The hornets posed a threat to wildlife, too, and to humans who are allergic to hornet stings. An attack by multiple hornets could trigger serious consequences in nonallergic people.     

No one knows how the hornets got to the US. Hornets are consumed as food throughout Asia, and used in traditional medicines. It is possible some were illegally imported. Or they may have stowed away accidentally on international shipments.

No confirmed sightings have occurred in three years. That does not mean the hornets won’t come back. But people will keep a sharp eye out for them. In the meantime, Washington beekeepers are breathing easier.

bee health · beekeeping · bees, pollinators, beekeeping, environment · natural cures · nature

Bee Health around the Globe: MEXICO

Mexico has great biodiversity in birds, amphibians, plants, and insects. Diverse species require abundant and varied vegetation, and that depends on a healthy population of pollinators.

The country’s farmers rely on pollinators, too. Like other countries around the world, Mexico has experienced a decline in its bee population due to loss of vegetation and increased use of fertilizers and agrochemicals on plants the bees visit.    

Add to that, the varroa mite. The enemy of beekeepers throughout the world has found its way to Mexico. When the mite showed up in the U.S. and Canada, Mexico closed its borders to U.S. bees. But it was only a matter of time until the destructive parasite showed up in our southern neighbor’s colonies.

The decline has economic implications. Mexico has 42,000 honey producers operating 2 million beehives. Honey exports bring about 56 million (US) dollars into the Mexican economy.

Mexico is home to native bees that live in small colonies and make honey. And many indigenous communities engage in beekeeping, cultivating and harvesting honey with pre-colonization methods, like using clay pots to house bees.

But the domesticated European beepollinates many more plants and produces much more honey. The two main production areas are the Yucatan Peninsula and the states of Chiapas, Veracruz, and Guerrero.  

Adding to the country’s beekeeping woes, Mexico has been under severe drought and faced extreme heat, especially in the northern part of the country. This exacerbated the problems facing domestic and wild bees.

Bees are dying in huge numbers because the lack of rain drastically reduced wild flower blooms. The bees went looking for pollen in fields with crops. Chemicals killed them, as well as pests.

The northern state of Chihuahua has a dry or semi-dry climate at the best of times, but rainfall has been unusually low in recent years. Dams and lagoons have emptied.

Farmers decided to leave land unplanted and use scarce water to keep long-standing groves of walnut trees from dying. One longtime beekeeper said that in his memory, the landscape has never been so bleak.

Mexico’s southern states have not been immune from lack of rainfall and high heat. Last year, beekeepers mounted a campaign to rescue wild bees that had no water or food sources, because the farmers needed them to pollinate their crops.