- Joined
- Mar 4, 2011
- Messages
- 2,725
- Reaction score
- 1,507
- Location
- Various
- Hive Type
- Smith
- Number of Hives
- >4000
I have, and there were only seven in the initial group, not aware of any problems with at least three of them, know there stuff with regards any aspects of bees and bee farming and extremely hard working.
Of course Hivemaker....rwo of them you know especially well, and if they were not already very well grounded in these things even before they started as apprentices I would be surprised. But.... rhose I have actually had a chance to talk to have been prepared, and have ideas consistent with, what outside the UK would be considered 'sidelining'. A lifestyle rather than a solid business aim.
I appreciate that it is probably ME that is the outlier here, but this is not a touchy feely job. I had one application from an ex apprentice and they only wanted office hours, money higher than a manager here, higher than I pay myself, and did not want to be in a sharp end bee team but rather wanted to do a bit of queen rearing, a bit of nucleus production, a bit of beekeeping, a bit of marketing, a bit of office based work. A dream job if you can get it I suppose.
My impression was they are ideally equipped to look after 150 hives or so, doing a bit of everything and not too much stress. A small business really. Nothing intrinsically wrong with that. Not what I need, but as I say, its me that's not normal here.
And I am talking only about the two I have had direct contact with. I cannot speak with the authority Hivemaker can on the education they were given, only on what the aspirations of the ones I had dealing with were.
Added later as a post script....
I suppose that my view on this...and my not wanting to take on apprentices (at least on the BFA scheme)...can be distilled down to a simple point. I want to train and hire people to work FOR a beefarmer.........rather than be a beefarmer in their own right.
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