Beekeeping Basics
(Page 9 of 9)
SWEET REWARDS
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If you take up beekeeping and manage your honeymakers with
care, you'll have the pleasure of learning about one of
nature's most intriguing phenomena. (The intricate patterns
of bee behavior provide continual discoveries to the most
experienced apiarist.) In addition, you'll begin to
understand how to cooperate with—rather than lord
over—the only livestock creatures whose wills have
never been crippled by domestication.
And although this article has emphasized the commitment and
labor that beekeeping will require of you , the
colony's caretaker, you'll probably learn to feel humble
when you compare your efforts to those of your winged
partners. For, as long-time beekeeper Richard Taylor has
artfully phrased it, "The truly monumental work of
apiculture is always done by the bees themselves."
EDITOR'S NOTE: MOTHER would like to thank Bill and Nancy
McCullough (leaders of our summer beekeeping seminar),
Lawrence Goltz (editor of Gleanings in Bee Culture), and
several thousand Apis mellifera for their help in gathering
much of the information related in this article.
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