peteinwilts
Drone Bee
- Joined
- May 12, 2009
- Messages
- 1,763
- Reaction score
- 34
- Location
- North Wilts
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- Lots and lots
slightly off topic...do vegetarians\vegans eat mushrooms?
Thanks for your quick responses everyone. I thought there probably would be a lot more to it than just plonking the hive there and letting them do their own thing!
Sorry, I used the umbrella term 'vegan' fairly loosely. Personally, I agree that the vegan/honey debate is a grey area, and its interesting to hear the opinions of people who actually keep bees. Perhaps vegans are misinformed about honey. I just feel personally, (and with my total lack of knowledge about beekeeping) that the bees work very hard to make the honey, I'd feel a bit unkind taking it away from them. Maybe I've got this wrong, maybe you only take a portion of it? Anyway, I need to read up a bit more. As you all wisely say, there's an important domestic bee/beekeeper co-dependancy going on.
The bumble bee hotel idea is great, thank you, I think that is probably the way to go for my plot.
Thank you all very much for your advice.
And avoid top bar hives or any other "Natural way" of beekeeping as all will clash with your ideals!
slightly off topic...do vegetarians\vegans eat mushrooms?
I do feel that is a bit like asking "do vegetarians\vegans eat carrots?"
I disagree... they are very different foodgroups
I used to work a few miles from a Mushroom farm. They used to make their own compost from chicken carcasses.
When the wind was blowing in the wrong direction in summer, the smell was horrendous.
carrots are vegetables that take nutriants from the soil. Mushrooms are fungii that take nutrients from rotting material (in this case chicken carcasses)
I disagree... they are very different foodgroups
I used to work a few miles from a Mushroom farm. They used to make their own compost from chicken carcasses.
When the wind was blowing in the wrong direction in summer, the smell was horrendous.
carrots are vegetables that take nutriants from the soil. Mushrooms are fungii that take nutrients from rotting material (in this case chicken carcasses)
Nellie, they are insects, not domestic animals. Highly colony structured perhaps like ants but insects none the less, or perhaps you have the same concern for all creatures?
Oh my word you learn something new everyday. So would Organic Mushrooms be OK for Vegans to eat? Animal waste free?
Fundamentally, yes. Once you put them into an artificial environment you're responsible for them whether it's a colony of bees or a herd of elephants.
If you put a package of bees into a hive of foundation and it starves before they get comb drawn is that nature taking its course or your fault for not feeding them?
If a swarm takes residence in a space of its own accord and you and your neighbours decide to leave them alone and see what happens that's one thing.
When you go pick up a swarm, nuc, package etc, stick them in a hive and then ignore them then you're failing in your responsibility to an organism that you decided to manipulate to begin with and potentially to the people around you that also share that space.
Should be fine, they wouldn't be eating the animal at all.
I think "Organic" mushrooms might be difficult to prove.
I agree. And I wouldn't be particularly happy if the "hands-off" beekeeper next door failed to spot that his bees were spreading AFB all over the place.
When you go pick up a swarm, nuc, package etc, stick them in a hive and then ignore them then you're failing in your responsibility to an organism that you decided to manipulate to begin with and potentially to the people around you that also share that space.
More unsupported tosh.
Keep them coming.
Chris
Fundamentally, yes. Once you put them into an artificial environment you're responsible for them whether it's a colony of bees or a herd of elephants.
If you put a package of bees into a hive of foundation and it starves before they get comb drawn is that nature taking its course or your fault for not feeding them?
If a swarm takes residence in a space of its own accord and you and your neighbours decide to leave them alone and see what happens that's one thing.
When you go pick up a swarm, nuc, package etc, stick them in a hive and then ignore them then you're failing in your responsibility to an organism that you decided to manipulate to begin with and potentially to the people around you that also share that space.
In the context of the original question, it's not responsible to put a hive of bees on an allotment and ignore them. For other Beekeepers in the vicinity disease, including [especially] varroa, is a problem and for non beekeeping neighbours a neglected hive especially one swarming frequently can be intimidating and it's the rest of us conspicuous by our attendance who'll take the flak for it and future Beekeepers will be told no, they can't use the allotment because of previous problems.Anyway it would be nice to see a bit of balance on here and an end to sweeping statements about disease and pests, most of which, like all sweeping statements are erroneous anyway.
More unsupported tosh.
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