- Joined
- Dec 21, 2011
- Messages
- 2,332
- Reaction score
- 106
- Location
- South London
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 10
I am not deriding it. I like honesty about failure. I just wish that certain high profile beekeepers were as honest. But then they are likely to have fewer avid followers..
My experiences of newbies starting with TBHs is they start with enthusiasm, no practical experience and an aversion to joining any association due to the gospel preached that frames are evil... and then lose all their bees over winter.
I stopped supplying TBH nucs to TBH newbies in 2013 for that very reason...
I think this is the darker side to the 'natural' beekeeping movement which is motivated by a very cynical marketing technique.
Prior to the 1990s treatments in hives weren't as prevalent as they are now because varroa wasn't here. Bees had happily lived in framed hives for the proceeding 150 years without any issues. Varroa required management and some of those management techniques use various chemicals.
In the proceeding 150 years they had lived in framed hives with zero issues. As far as I can tell there is no actual evidence that one wooden box you keep bees in is any more beneficial to bees than any other made from the same material.
If you want to a sell a product you need to convince people it's better than the other ones and labelling it revolutionary and natural is a very powerful marketing device. But, if you want to label it as revolutionary you need to attack the status quo and the worst you can make it look the better for you.
This is a technique utilised with great success by some in the ‘natural beekeeping movement’ who have painted framed hives as concentration camps for bees and the BBKA as the guards. Despite the glaring contradiction that top bar hives use a management technique based on frames.
It’s been a very successful tactic. These people have sold lots of books, courses and etc. The negative aspect is the have created this island of beekeepers who see other beekeepers as enemies.
I’m a beekeeper, I monitor my bees and intervene if I believe I need to for the benefit of my bees. If you keep bees a different way that’s great, we can exchange ideas and may learn something.
It’s a shame that cynical business people have created this unnecessary barrier between beekeepers.