Unfortunately times have changed.
All the hyperbole has created a stampede into the craft! Upshot is thousands of people have suddenly found the holistic side of their nature .
First thing to do is get hold of a hive ! have it populated with bees any bee will do but it must be populated now now now!!!.
There are and will always be people who will supply that demand regardless of the purchasers knowledge !.
Result, swarms all over the place, neglected hives, defensive bees from inappropriate crosses !
An inordinate amount of allergic beekeepers (more like Oh! Dear I didn't realise my own darling bees would sting Mummy/Daddy.) Sound far fetched? I think not I have met them by the dozen!
The roll of local associations has also changed to meet this demand, droves of newbies are enrolled for courses , bi-weekly training sessions are arranged , the tutors often being newbies themselves equiped with little or no knowledge/experience!
The days when a guy/gal , was bitten by the bee bug , looked around, found a bee keeper, expressed an interest in beekeeping and was prepared to listen and learn , help and most importantly wait until ready to be responsible for the welfare of a colony before becoming the proud owner of one , are over!
So ,what to do?
Education has got to be the route to stamping out this silliness and introduce some rationale!.
Formal (in an academic sense)isn't what I'm referring to but surely it stands to reason that a format including siting of hives, swarm control ,disease recognition and limitation , making of nucs, and uniting colonies should be the minimum requirements before anyone embarks on the husbandry of beekeeping ? by what ever route, personal mentor, or informal tuition ?
The situation we find ourselves it to date will implode if blithely ignored !
John Wilkinson