Natural Beekeeping Trust says don't eat honey
My sister in law sent me a copy of a letter from last Tuesday's Daily Mail. It was from the Natural Beekeeping Trust. It says:
Why the honey diet is bad news for our bees
Women are urged to ‘drop-a-dress-size’ for the party season by having a spoonful of honey before bedtime (Mail) – but I would say ‘don’t’.
Bees are struggling. Honey yields have dropped from more than 100lb per hive in the 1800s to about 25lb in the past 5 years according to the British Beekeeping Association annual surveys. In the Seventies, when I was ten, you could still get 80lb of honey on average per hive. I’d be surprised if you could now get a maximum of 40 lb without killing the bees.
There’s already precious little honey for the bees themselves. When bees starve, they kill the males and pupae first. Any bee can ask another bee to share food, which they always do – and the last bee to die is the queen.
Bees are in serious decline due to pesticides, diseases, chemical treatments for mites, mono crops and exploitation for honey. All bees’ problems can be traced back to humans Bees stripped of honey by beekeepers are often fed sugars or corn syrups which weaken their natural defences.
By far the worst drop in honey yields been over the past 20 years. The queen bees, who used to mate reliably when I kept bees as a child, are no longer able to do so. Before you buy honey, ask how it was made. Was the bees’ own honey removed and replaced with sugar? Were the bees treated with chemicals and acid washes to remove mites?
There are bee-friendly beekeepers who treat their bees with respect and care but their numbers are very small. Treat honey as something as precious as it is to the bees – don’t consume it simply to drop a dress size.
Jonathan Powell,
Natural Beekeeping Trust, Frome, Somerset.
I'm a relatively new beekeeper but from what I've read, the problems referred to in this letter are due to changed agricultural methods, climate change and localised weather patterns. I was not aware that the issues result from nasty beekeepers feeding their bees with sugar syrup and corn syrup - whatever that is!
Discouraging people from buying honey seems to me to be a strange way to protect the bees.
CVB