We don’t keep bees alone; our bees don’t live alone. Beekeepers
belong to a social community. We share the environment with other beekeepers
and all of the bees from miles around. In recent years it has become apparent
that our managed bees and our beekeeping practices affect all of the bee
colonies in our area. Healthy bees from our hives may rob the honey from the
hives of collapsing colonies and return with parasitic Varroa mites. Likewise, if
we are not controlling the mites in our hives, we are spreading them to hives
for miles around. Bees from mite-infested hives in the area may abandon their
hives and move into our hives, bringing mites with them. Mite-infested hives can
reasonably be called “Varroa bombs.”
Beekeepers, farmers, gardeners, and homeowners make up
communities of individuals whose activities affect each other, sometimes
benefiting and at other times adversely affecting others. There are specific
groups within the community of beekeepers: those who manage their hives in different
manners, those who manage their hives for different purposes, those who treat
their hives with different products or measures to control parasitic mites, and
those who keep their hives in different forage areas. There are urban
beekeepers who may contend with city ordinances or neighborhood association
rules, forest beekeepers, and farmland beekeepers. There are beekeepers with
stationary hives and others with migratory operations. While there are many
ways that we manage bees, we all belong to a community of bee stewards.
Perhaps, the most important communities that beekeepers belong
to are the local, state, and regional beekeeping associations. These groups are
effective in sharing useful information on managing bees in today’s
environment. One of these active groups in Tennessee is the Savannah Area
Beekeepers Association. I was honored to be invited to speak at the association’s
annual Short Course in Beekeeping along with EAS Master Beekeeper Kent Williams,
shown here giving a presentation on new developments in controlling Varroa mites.
--Richard
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