
This title interested me for a few reasons. I remember being shocked when I saw documentary a few years ago about a region in China where pesticides and other toxins have wiped out the local honeybees and labourers have to pollinate pear blossoms by hand! Over the past year or two, it’s been almost impossible to miss the relatively regular media reports about Colony Collapse Disorder and the fact that researchers really haven’t figured out why more than 30% of our bee population is dying out every year. So when we had to re-plant our yard after last year’s whole home renovation project, I kept thinking I wanted to plant flowers and other plants that were friendly to bees, butterflies and birds. After reading The Incomparable Honeybee this morning, I realize I need to tweak a few things.
But I’m getting ahead of myself… First, here a few especially fascinating facts from the book:
- If you like to eat, you depend on bees! Bees pollinate more than 110 crops in North America and one-third of everything on our plates at mealtimes depends on healthy bee populations. (p.4)
- “Honeybees and humans share many similarities: we socialize, dance, eat honey, touch, feel, mimic one another, sleep, enjoy caffeine and nicotine, vote, and get sick.” (p. 5)
- It takes 12 honeybees a combined flying distance of over 9,600 km over their entire foraging lives to produce 1 teaspoon of honey. (pp. 28-29)
- Bees have been trained to detect explosives, drugs and illnesses. (p 61) Who knows…some day in the future we might be going through bee security before catching a flight to our favourite holiday destination! Or perhaps bees will be essential partners in clearing landmine fields.
Since a healthy bee population is essential to the security of our food supply and more, what specific steps can individuals take to help reverse the sharp decline in honeybee (and other bee) populations? Dr. Reese Halter devotes an entire chapter to this topic. Since I already follow some of his advice, here’s my take-away list:
- Shop for neem-based insecticides to help control the ant populations in our yard (neem-based insecticides do NOT harm bees, ladybugs, moths, bats, hummingbirds, dragonflies and other beneficial insects).
- At the appropriate time of year, re-arrange some of the wildflowers I planted in the spring so that they’re in 1 meter x 1 meter colour blocks (not the abstract curved shapes they currently form).
- Let some of the carrots, parsnips and beets go to seed at the end of the summer. This will provide an autumn food source for some species of bees.
You may wish to borrow a copy of the book from your local library so you can read the last chapter for the full list of recommendations and consider which one or two things you can do to help the bees recover. If you prefer, this title is available in e-book format. Check with your local book store or order directly from publisher Rocky Mountain Books if you’d like your very own copy.
RATING: 5 out of 5 stars. This is a quick and revelatory read. If you like to eat, you owe it to yourself to learn more about bees.
RECOMMENDED: For those with an interest in nature, flowers, natural medicine, plant evolution, bees of all sorts, and food!
If you’re interested in trying to identify the bees and wasps you see in your backyard or local park, I’ve found Insects of Alberta to be quite helpful. Please leave a comment to recommend other references and resources.
