The Great Hive Design Trial!

Holy moley, it’s live. The Kickstarter page for the Great Hive Design Trial just went live. If you’re interested in helping honeybees or know someone who is, have a look. You never know, you could wind up being part of something really special.

Bees Matter

Given the crash course in plant pollination that everyone has had since CCD reared its ugly head in the US, it seems kind of silly to have to say it. Of course bees matter. Yet, that’s what a group of Ontario farm organizations “and the agricultural industry that supports them” felt the burning need to say on the weekend. And say …

We’re back!

Well, that was painful. I keep saying that after doing a re-org of the site. I think I’ll stop now. So? How have you been? 😀

The “Eco Bee Box”

Greg stumbled upon this site this morning and it looks very interesting. A bit fancy for my tastes, but if you want a beautiful hive, then this might be right up your alley. For the record, the site’s claim that topbar hives “fail(s) to meet USDA regulatory inspection  guidelines” is utter nonsense. Topbars are easily removed for inspection, it just may take …

More than half of Ontario honey bee colonies died last winter

Jeez, what a slaughter. 58% of them gone. I don’t think that banning neonicotinoid pesticides is THE answer, though. It’s an important step, but there’s no way that pesticides are completely reponsible for this. If anyone needs more proof that the industry must change their practices, this is it. More than half of Ontario honey bee colonies died last winter: report …

Another Silent Spring? | George Monbiot

George Monbiot writes in The Guardian: Here’s our choice. We wait and see whether a class of powerful pesticides, made by Bayer and Syngenta, is indeed pushing entire ecosystems to oblivion, or we suspend their use while proper trials are conducted. The natural world versus two chemical companies: how hard can this be? via Another Silent Spring? | George Monbiot.

Honey & Pollen Plants of Ontario

In the time B.B. (Before bees), I didn’t really give a lot of thought to wildflowers. I could identify a few dozen, but I didn’t have any particular reason to learn about more. After bees, I’m sure I’ve learned 100 or more. This is a neat site to help you identify what that particular plant is that you’re looking at based upon …