SimonP
New Bee
There has been an increased trend in urban beekeeping. What are peoples opinion on this, do people think that the urban environment is fit for the keeping of bees?
However, would you be willing Nose Ma to give up your time to look after your companies hives and train willing people in how to do the same?
The public may perceive a danger, but thats a totally different thing to their actually being a danger.
It is the perception that is important. Witness, oh, I don't know, nuclear power. Least number of deaths per kWh for any form of electrical generation, but everyone is scared of it. Facts seldom get in the way of perception.
There's a great book on just this called "Risk" by Dan Gardner - he compares our "gut" feel to our "head" thinking things through. Gut usually wins where head has no data it can process carefully, so 20,000 bees that can sting = very dangerous and scary.
I do not know if the local associations could spare the people to look after all of them, and I am sure a few firms would read “beekeeping for dummies” and give it a go.
Should that happen bizarre legislation will ban the practice (if you don’t believe me, just go and look up the Dangerous Dogs Act for a knee-jerk piece of insanity) and we will be worse off.
You seem to be thinking there is some explosion of firms plonking hives on their roof for publicity, without a clue what they are doing? Does that sound like something a firm in the city of london would be doing to you?
I’m a huge fan of getting people involved with bees, and understanding them. I just don’t think lots of hives in an urban environment is the way to do it.
Given how well they have run the economy - "yes"! Sound decision making does not seem to be a strong point in the City.
I was describing a straw man. I worry more about the trendy soya latte drinking Guardian reading couple with a top bar hive (it's more natural, you see, beekeepers are killing the bees) on their balcony near the Barbican, who do not look after it properly and cause problems.
I want to see lots of people interested in bees, and carefully looking after their delicate little charges. I'm just don't believe this is a good or safe way to do it.
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