bjosephd
Drone Bee
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2014
- Messages
- 1,129
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- North Somerset
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- 3
So what commercial crops can be expected or even hoped for (or not hoped for!) in the UK?
I know there are mixed opinions about the blessing/curse ratio of OSR, although so far I've never been close enough to any to experience it (probably about 10 or 15 miles away).
In my immediate area within bees reach is miscanthus (elephant grass) which doesn't flower at all as far as I'm aware... many acres have been put over to it on what used to be grazing pastures, sadly the dairy industry has dwindled significantly over the years.
There are a few small neglected traditional orchards near by, and even a gazillion acres of Thatchers commercial orchards (just out of reach) - but the Thatchers orchards no doubt will be sprayed with god knows what one imagines.
Other than that the rest is hedgerows and grazing pastures.
Just wondering, if at the pub I bump into the local farmer who has decided to grow miscanthus on a ton of his land, is there an alternative commercially viable crop I could suggest to him to grow instead?
Miscanthus appears to be a very low maintenance crop.
What else do we grow commercially here in this here island of ours that might provide for bees also?
BJD
I know there are mixed opinions about the blessing/curse ratio of OSR, although so far I've never been close enough to any to experience it (probably about 10 or 15 miles away).
In my immediate area within bees reach is miscanthus (elephant grass) which doesn't flower at all as far as I'm aware... many acres have been put over to it on what used to be grazing pastures, sadly the dairy industry has dwindled significantly over the years.
There are a few small neglected traditional orchards near by, and even a gazillion acres of Thatchers commercial orchards (just out of reach) - but the Thatchers orchards no doubt will be sprayed with god knows what one imagines.
Other than that the rest is hedgerows and grazing pastures.
Just wondering, if at the pub I bump into the local farmer who has decided to grow miscanthus on a ton of his land, is there an alternative commercially viable crop I could suggest to him to grow instead?
Miscanthus appears to be a very low maintenance crop.
What else do we grow commercially here in this here island of ours that might provide for bees also?
BJD