Thursday, January 20, 2011

Column About Bees in the Bristol Evening Post

Here is an extract from the column I wrote in the Bristol Evening Post about bees. The headline was "We all lived with Bees in our Backyards".

"In past times we all lived with bees in our backyards. They were a natural part of our existence. Living close to the land and food production most people knew and understood the interdependence of man and the environment. Like much in modern Britain the sowing, source, extraction and processing of our food is now far removed from most of our lives. We no longer witness or experience it directly.

Wildscreen, an environmental charity, hosted a debate recently. One of the panellists commented that everything we need, want and have comes from nature. If one crucial part is missing then human kind is in serious trouble.

The honey bee doesn’t just provide honey. Along with solitary bees and bumble bees, they are important pollinators. For example, bees pollinate approximately 90% of apples. Without bees we would have very limited food choices.

Now ravaged by imported disease, pesticides and loss of food sources, the bee is facing many serious challenges to its health and existence.

There are things anyone can do to help. We need to plant trees, shrubs and flowers that provide their food. We need to buy organic to reduce pesticide use. We need healthier, more natural beekeeping methods that are about the bees and not the honey. We need to help bees develop resistance. The bee has survived millennia without man’s intervention. But man changes the rules by changing its habitat.

We need more bees and more people to keep honey bees; to provide homes for bumble and solitary bees. Beekeeping can be simple and cheap. Schoolchildren can build bee houses and plant seeds.

I very much enjoy hearing about bees at official events; the developers at Constructing Excellence who include bees in developments, seeing beehives at Blaise nursery. Bees do well in cities; let us have more bees in Bristol."

From First Lady, "We All Lived with Bees in our Backyards", Bristol Evening Post 18th October 2010 by Jenny Bradley.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Review of Bristol Sustainable Bee Group 2010




June saw the first meeting of the new bee group in Bristol, Bristol Sustainable Bee Group (BSBG).

The aim of the group is to support the bee population of honey, solitary and bumble bees. It is about the bees, not the honey.

BSBG believes in sustainable beekeeping methods. It is in favour of finding healthier ways of keeping bees through experimentation. Against the use of harmful pesticides, it encourages planting for bees to give plentiful variety and continuity of foodstuffs throughout the flying season.

As well keeping honey bees, many members encourage solitary and bumble bees by placing suitable houses in their gardens.

As a group BSBG has close links with Yabeep (Yatton Bee Project) which became so successful so quickly that a Bristol based group was needed. BSBG also encompasses greater Bristol including adjacent areas in South Gloucestershire and North Somerset. BSBG is indebted to Yabeep for content on http://yabeep.blogspot.com/.

The first meeting agreed the basis of the group which is very much about mutual support. It runs a 'buddy' system, putting members in touch who live close by for hands on help.

Meetings are held at members houses - mostly in the gardens - monthly in the bee season from early spring through to autumn. We also had a Christmas social in Bristol jointly with Yabeep (http://yabeep.blogspot.com/2010/12/christmas-lunch-2010.html).

The meetings share experience and knowledge, allow members to get to know one another, and often involve looking at a member's hive.

It has been a great start. Membership includes some experienced, but mostly new, beekeepers, with many having the great excitement of getting their first bees in 2010. We welcome both traditional and top-bar beekeepers as well as non beekeepers with an interest in bees.

Meeting Dates for 2011 are as follows:

5th March Dundry

2nd April

30th April

4th June Hotwells

2nd July Dundry

August No Meeting

3rd September Bishopston

1st October

For more information contact jenny@bonkersaboutbees.com