SABBATICAL

SABBATICAL

Sunday, March 28, 2010

HOW BEES HAVE ALWAYS LIVED

Bees have been around for a long time. Most of that time, literally millions of years, they have built their hives on their own, in hollow trees or caves, or even sometimes in the open.

Humans have been stealing their honey for perhaps fifteen thousand years. No, I have no personal recollection of that, but that is what people who study such things tell me.

People appear to have been “keeping” bees in some form or another for about four thousand years. There are historical records from Egypt and even older civilizations that make reference to beekeeping operations. But for most of that time, beekeeping mostly just consisted of providing a hollow log of straw skep. The bees themselves were usually killed each year in order to extract the honey.

It wasn’t until 1851, about one hundred and sixty years ago, that Lorenzo Langstroth invented the modern bee hive with moveable frames. This invention allowed easy manipulation of the bees and extraction of excess honey without destroying the bees. But this hive is not a large departure from their normal wild existence, and bees seemed to thrive just fine.

In 1851 the majority of people still lived a rural existence, closely tied to agriculture and the land. Even those who lived in small towns usually had gardens and often domestic animals. Not everyone kept bees, but many did.

Bee keeping, for the next one hundred years after the Langstroth hive, was a modest affair with a few hives set aside on a corner of many farms, and mostly just ignored until honey harvest. Requeening had to occur every few years, but it was not religiously attended to because the bees did pretty well on their own. Farming was basically a nurturing activity, not the extractive activity it has become today. Bees were valued for their pollination, honey and wax for candles. They were not yet an industry.

But that has all changed in the past few years. In my next post I will explore the massive changes that have occurred very rapidly in the last few years.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

OF SPACE, TIME, AND BEES

Modern urban life has removed us to a great extent from natural cycles and, therefore, a feeling for changes as they occur through time. The study of history is sometimes seen by modern students, and many lay people, as irrelevant and useless. Geography is also sometimes seen in an archaic light. There seems to be less interest in where things are located, and why they are there, than there once was. Now we just want a gps systems to tell us how to get there.

But the distribution of events through time and space can sometimes shed light on current events that are explanatory, and sometimes even prescriptive. This blog will be the first in a series of blogs in which I will explore how bee keeping has changed through time, and how bee distribution in space has had an effect on all people whether they know it or not.

Space and time are the constant parameters of the human drama. Much of physics is devoted to these subjects. Chemistry is about invisible events that occur in short time spans and within a miniscule topography. Biology has adopted (I believe wrongly) how living things change through time as a central tenet.

Over the next few weeks I will discuss how bees and bee keeping has changed over time and in relationship to space. I hope you come back and visit.