Just back from a quick trip to the hives and a look at the monitoring boards. I didn't take the car into the field. The grass is
very wet.
So I walked, and had a little time to myself.
We are constantly challenged to provide the best nest conditions for our bees – within the limits of our knowledge and experience. Some beekeepers become so focussed on this goal that they end up taking it to its logical conclusion – which is to set your bees free. Torben Schiffer,
who spoke at the National Honey Show last year, told the story of his ten years of beekeeping which ended up with his bees in log-style hives that he had manufactured. He realised that he could not achieve the natural state he wanted for his bees in conventional hives, so he burnt them. He states that, because we cannot begin to meet the worldwide demand for honey, we should stop trying. Honey is a non-essential food.
Schiffer is now content with his beekeeping. He never opens any hive, never treats for disease, never controls swarming, and never takes a honey harvest – except from his colonies that die. And he rejoices in now being able to go on holiday.
Soon he won't have any bees.
I find this position completely understandable. Unless you accept that you are keeping bees as livestock, and for the food they provide, then you have to concede that you are keeping them for, well, fun. This is why we have pets. But bees are never fully domesticated, and some of us find that we are uneasy with keeping wild animals for human amusement.
Despite how often we hear the phrase ‘greedy beekeepers’, for some of us, it’s the honey that makes beekeeping right.