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Here is a link to show exactly where the Space Station is over earth right now: Click Here
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Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
#87791
04/10/07 08:43 PM
04/10/07 08:43 PM
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OP
Charter Member Active Member 2014
Most Dedicated Member
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Joined: Jul 2000
Posts: 2,019
Northern CA
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From reading this and other articles about this I assume this is a very serious thing that is happening. You can read about it here: Bees are leaving
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: Avalee]
#87793
04/10/07 11:26 PM
04/10/07 11:26 PM
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From reading this and other articles about this I assume this is a very serious thing that is happening. You can read about it here: Bees are leaving Avalee, I do wonder if some of the "end time signs" will be man made. Consequence of man's greed in the stewardship of the earth. Are these two quotes applicable? Are these ills visited upon the race through God's providence? --No; they exist because the people have gone contrary to his providence, and still continue rashly to disregard his laws.-- R. and H., 1884, No. 31. {HL 52.3}
God is not responsible for the suffering which follows the non-conformity to natural law and moral obligations to him.-- H. R. {HL 53.2}
Agribusiness has gotten so far from nature in the treatment of animals, fish, birds and bees, that it is little wonder that we are seeing the types of disease in them that we are. To me it is a "sin against nature". Juliette de Bairacli-Levy is one of my favorite herbalist. She lived very close so nature. Besides raising her dogs, and farm animals, she kept bees. She said about bees. Bees respond very well to nature beekeeping, because they themselves are, “instinctive and highly skilled herbalists. . . . .
Leave the bees alone to manage their own kingdoms (in which management they are perfection in every detail) and the healthy hives will produce enough surplus healthy honey to justify the small amount of care required from the bee keeper. (Such as painting and whitewashing the hives, supplying combs, and what should be done - the planting of a garden of bee herbs. pg. 345
Herbal Handbook for Farm and Stable, by Juliette de Bairacli-Levy Here is an article on Herbal Beekeeping http://www.richters.com/newdisplay.cgi?page=InfoSheets/d9001.html&cart_id=81.1496Wikipedia has a info on Colony Collapse Disorder, Just a couple of interesting quotes from the article. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony_Collapse_Disorder Honey bees are not native to the Americas, therefore their necessity as pollinators in the US is limited to strictly agricultural uses. They are responsible for pollination of approximately one third of the United States' crop species, including such species as: almonds, peaches, soybeans, apples, pears, cherries, raspberries, blackberries, cranberries, and strawberries; many but not all of these plants can be (and often are) pollinated by other insects, including other kinds of bees, in the U.S., but typically not on a commercial scale. While some farmers of a few kinds of native crops do bring in honey bees to help pollinate, none specifically need them, and when honey bees are absent from a region, the native pollinators quickly reclaim the niche, typically being better adapted to serve those plants (assuming that the plants normally occur in that specific area). On the 30% of crop types where honey bees are used -- even though many other creatures are actually more efficient at pollinating, on a per-individual basis -- most native pollinators cannot be mass-utilized as easily or as effectively as honey bees, if they will visit the plants at all. Beehives can be moved from crop to crop as needed, and the bees will visit many plants in large numbers, compensating via sheer numbers for what they lack in efficiency. The commercial viability of these crops is therefore strongly tied to the beekeeping industry. The Sierra Club Genetic Engineering Committee recently published a letter to Senator Thomas Harkin on the web with the title "GE and bee Colony Collapse Disorder -- science needed!".[18] They are of the opinion that "highly respected scientists believe that exposure to genetically engineered crops and their plant-produced pesticides merit serious consideration as either the cause or a contributory factor to the development and spread of CCD." Nine literature references which might support this theory are cited
Last edited by crater; 04/10/07 11:35 PM. Reason: correct website
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: Avalee]
#87794
04/11/07 01:33 AM
04/11/07 01:33 AM
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Now if I was, say an evangelical, I might think the bees had been "Raptured"! Sorry, After rereading the the title, I just had to throw that in.
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: crater]
#87816
04/11/07 03:54 PM
04/11/07 03:54 PM
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Can't fault you for that one!
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: Avalee]
#87991
04/17/07 10:33 PM
04/17/07 10:33 PM
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From reading this and other articles about this I assume this is a very serious thing that is happening. You can read about it here: Bees are leaving Here is the latest theory on colony collapse disorder (CCD).
Cell phones hurting bee populations?Bees are suddenly and mysteriously dying off worldwide. Now some scientists blame RADIATION FROM CELL PHONES and cell phone towers, which they say interferes with bees' navigation, so worker bees go out to find pollen, and never find their way back to the hives. http://www.canada.com/topics/technology/...57a1d77&k=86662Apiculture world abuzz over theory that cellphone radiation may be killing beeshttp://news.independent.co.uk/environment/wildlife/article2449968.ece
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: crater]
#89940
06/20/07 03:26 AM
06/20/07 03:26 AM
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Just for the record, the person who came up with the cell phone idea for Colony collapse Disorder admits his idea was based on junk science and he didn't even use a cell phone in his "research". The question going around bee keeping circles is CCD real or just part of a cycle of die offs we've been seeing on and off for years? Or media hype? Apparently it is real but no one knows why. Same with the media hype) The latest theory is that it's a combination of things, new groups of insecticides that are synthetic nicotine based (that the best I can explain), varroa mites that live on the bees and maybe most of all stress from moving the bees. In order for a bee keeper to stay in business, at least in the US he/she must keep the bees moving for the pollination money. Our bees are on the road a lot, in the fall from Michigan to Georgia, then in winter to California for almonds, then back to Georgia in very early spring, then to SW Michigan for blueberries and finally to Central Michigan for the honey crop. That is a lot of travel and it is hard on the bees. We figure with each move we might lose up to 10% of the bees. Thankfully not all is doom and gloom. We should expect at this time of year to find about 10% hive loss since the last time we opened the hive, instead we are finding maybe 4 or 5%, and for the 2nd year in a row we're getting a spring honey crop. Something we only get about one time in three. And at least here in Michigan other bee keepers are reporting good results as well. We are hopeful that our 17-18 hundred hives will continue to do well. Redfog
If at first you don't succeed.....destroy all evidence you ever tried.
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: Redfog]
#89943
06/20/07 12:16 PM
06/20/07 12:16 PM
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That, being the case, what then are you doing that the others are not doing?
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: Daryl]
#89949
06/20/07 10:10 PM
06/20/07 10:10 PM
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Nothing that I know of. Maybe it's just worse in some areas than others, but really while some are having problems with CCD, many, and I dare say the majority are not. A lot of it has been overblown my the media, but of course that is easy to say when our bees are healthy.
We do wonder though about where we got the majority of our queens this year. Most came from Australia, maybe we just happened upon a good strain of bees that are resistant to CCD.
Really no one has any real idea of what the problem is, or even how wide spread it is. It might be that some apiarists have a little die off (we did two years ago) and they hear about other bee keepers having CCD so they jump on the band wagon and assume they have it as well.
Richard
If at first you don't succeed.....destroy all evidence you ever tried.
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: Redfog]
#90076
06/26/07 08:35 PM
06/26/07 08:35 PM
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If at first you don't succeed.....destroy all evidence you ever tried.
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Re: Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
[Re: Redfog]
#90198
06/29/07 07:09 PM
06/29/07 07:09 PM
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Interesting article, Redfog.
In what way does it affect you?
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Here is the link to this week's Sabbath School Lesson Study and Discussion Material: Click Here
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