johnmcc;231397Land "stewardship" round here is very patchy. Short of contacting Defra how would I find out?[/QUOTE said:
Almost all the sprays used today are actually pretty benign. Damage to the colonies either nil or minimal. Not seen a significant pesticide spray kill now for several years. We shut in nothing as there is no point. The farmers and contractors almost without exception use relatively target specific treatments and will, so far as is possible, spray out of the heat of the day. Even when they spray in the middle of the day the bees seem to be unfazed by it all, and many modern insecticides smell unpleasant (I understand they are made to in many cases) and this keeps the bes away until the spray has dried. The field is safe for the bees again in a matter of minutes. Any bee unfortunate enough to actually be struck by the spray does not make it back to the hive, and so apart from a slight loss of foragers in the worst possible case (I reckon more are eaten by birds in a day) you never notice it.
Complaining to/harrassing farmers and contractors generally has one effect............a request to leave. You become yet another difficulty they have to face and one that is easy for them to fix with a single call to tell you to remove your bees. You HAVE to work with them and not against them. Discussing the matter in a calm and informed manner with your growers usually is fine and builds a relationship whereby they will consider the bees. Most are already very 'bee aware'. We have 115 spring locations in use and not one problem landowner/farmer/contractor, and they are happy too as they are not given grief by a problem beekeeper.
We are not the top dogs in the countryside and we have to take our place in a co-operative land use structure.