Friday, November 01, 2024

Book Review - The Beekeeper's Guide: Building Skills and Knowledge - Princeton University Press


           Four eminent beekeepers, two British and two American, have combined their talent and experience to create a formidable manual for beekeepers large and small. There has been a growing interest in recent years in apiaries, both as a hobby, and in the form of large for-profit operations essential to the pollination of many crops. In response to the pervasive and systematic destruction of the environment, and the widespread desire for people to do their part in remediating it, (sometimes ephemeral it must be said), keeping bees and producing honey seems both "easy" and "natural." Many newbies quickly discover that successful beekeeping requires capital investment, dedication, the acquisition of knowledge, hard work and commitment, with no guarantee of getting honey, and they quickly fall by the wayside.

     

      Touched on but briefly is the danger of swamping areas with hives of honey bees, thereby posing a serious threat to resident populations of native bees. Rarely, if ever, is the amount of available habitat and biomass of food assessed before hives are located, and there is no control on their proliferation. The hot topic of "beewashing" is not addressed at all. There are many companies offering to rent and maintain hives for you; their only goal (despite protestations to the contrary) is to make money. 
     It has become popular in cities to install rooftop hives. A few hives, perhaps with its own rooftop garden of pollinator plants, are quickly joined by others as companies seek to burnish their image, and in short order honey bee populations outstrip resources. Rather than installing more hives, planting pollinator gardens would be a wiser choice.


     In fairness this book is not intended as a polemic on the state of bee populations writ large, but it would seem logical, reasonable and ethical that every concerned beekeeper would have the interests of all pollinators at heart.
     The book covers everything you could possibly wish to know to ensure that you have a successful experience keeping bees, from the clothing to wear, the tools to use, the design and construction of hives, beekeeping groups and clubs you can join, winterization of a hive, the recognition and control of parasites and diseases, the collection of honey...and on and on. There is not a single aspect of the practical hands-on experience of beekeeping that is not enunciated in clear detail. The text is well-written, constructive, precise and informative.


     If you are a beekeeper now, or contemplating becoming one, please read this book. It is filled with sage advice for veteran and newcomer alike. You cannot help but benefit from it.


The Beekeeper's Guide: Building Skills and Knowledge - Princeton University Press
Meredith May, Claire Jones, Anne Rowberry, and Margaret Murdin
Hardcover - $24.95 USD - ISBN: 9780691263564 288
288 pages - 6 x 8.5 inches (15 x 21.25 cm)
239 colour and black-and-white illustrations
Publication date: 05 November, 2024



David M. Gascoigne,
David M. Gascoigne,

I'm a life long birder. My interests are birds, nature, reading, books, outdoors, travel, food and wine.

14 comments:

  1. ...I realize that bees are essential, but keeping bee would be last on my list.

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  2. It sure is a great guide for beekeepers.The world of bees is truly fascinating.
    Your library must be very interesting...
    Un abrazo y buen fin de semana

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  3. this is a book I will never need, because bees terrify me, but I am glad they wrote it because I realize we NEED bees for food and I do love FOOD. ha ha... I have a dear friend in Texas that she and her sons wife are bee keepers together. she would love the book

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  4. This would have been a good gift for my stepdaughter who years ago started five beehives...... It was surrounded by an electric fence to keep the Bears out. They took classes and found out what they needed to know...They were successful but they had to stop raising bees due to her husbands severe allergy. He ended up in the emergency room in anaphylactic shock....Bye, Bye Bees!!
    xxoo

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  5. This looks like a great read for beekeepers. Our state did an aerial spraying after the storm to prevent mosquito infestation after the storm and it killed thousands of bees.

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    Replies
    1. A small number of those mosquitoes will survive the spray, develop immunity and breed resistant strains, so a new poison will have to be developed. And so it continues, and as you point out sprays are often indiscriminate and kill beneficial species. We never learn, do we?



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  6. Definitely a MUST have for any beeper out there.

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  7. I am all in favour of growing plants for the pollinators (all of them). I am less in favour of indiscriminate bee keeping but welcome a book to educate them (and us).
    I am sure I could happily spend days in your library...

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  8. I have a neighbor who has a lot of beehives, David. I am happy that so many of them visit my garden. That's a great book series you're reviewing! Hugs and kisses, Marit

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    Replies
    1. I am sure that your garden is a safe haven and a source on nectar for them.

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  9. Es una buena idea, además de con esas coolmenas se consigue un buen producto.
    Un abrazo.

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  10. It is something I have considered and still do. I think this book is a must for me either way. :-D

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