I said good bye to the students at Apinec. In the few
days that I was with them I shared information about producing products from
the bee hive, and together we created a procedure for making tej, the Ethiopian
honey mead. I also answered quite a few questions about America. There were
numerous questions about “red-skinned” American Indians and American family
customs, especially the role of females in our society. Many wanted to know
about the prospects for the reelection of President Barak Obama. The citizens
of remote Bonga, Ethiopia were versed in American political issues at great
depth and understanding. The men each gave me a warm Ethiopian handshake,
shoulder bump, and hug. They were all amused when I gave the one female in the
group an American hug. Wubishet Adugna and I headed for Jimma by truck.
As we travelled the dusty road through the Kaffa
Zone, we observed numerous traditional hives hanging high in trees. The hives
are a beautiful sight on the Ethiopian highland ridges adorning tall Cordia africana trees, “weyra” in
Amharic. We stopped at the home of beekeeper Abeba Rausha who showed me the
bees he keeps in modern bee hives, modified Zander hives. Most modern bee hives
in Ethiopia are painted yellow. Forest coffee beans dried in the sun on the
ground in front of Abeba’s bee hives. Abeba served us fresh bread that his wife
had baked along with valonia honey and coffee. This was indeed a delicious and
memorable meal shared on the porch of Abeba’s home. Abeba manages 175 bee hives
with some modern hives and many traditional hives. White blossoms of valonia, a
low tree of 20 to 30 feet covered the southwestern Ethiopia highlands. The
Kaffa Zone is the heart of the organic forest honey and coffee region. The word
“coffee” comes from Kaffa. The coffee tree is thought to have been discovered
here and taken from the Kaffa zone to be replanted in equatorial regions around
the world.
--Richard
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