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Silence of the Bees
How can you help the bees?

While researchers probe deeper into understanding CCD, or colony collapse disorder, and beekeepers work harder to improve bee health, ordinary citizens can help the honeybee too.

Go Retro — Become a Backyard Beekeeper

Over the years, our diets have increased the demand for a constant stream of all-season fruits and veggies. Such demand hasn’t bypassed the bees. It’s turned bee pollination into a year-round service and beekeeping into a commercial industry. Today, there are half as many beekeepers as there were two decades ago, and the remaining beekeepers are mostly large-scale pollination services with thousands of hives and millions of bees. But there was a time when beekeeping was much more of a hobby than a commercial industry. “Beekeeping is a graying hobby,” says Jeff Pettis of the Dept of Agriculture. Joining the ranks of backyard beekeepers can not only infuse the dying hobby with life, it can strengthen the bee gene pool by adding healthy local bees to the mix.

If you’re interested in becoming a backyard beekeeper, experts recommend starting with a local beekeepers’ association to learn about keeping bees alive and healthy. It’s important that bees are adapted to the local climate, so you’ll want to start with a local source for bees. Aside from contributing to the bee population, just two hives can pollinate an entire mid-sized residential garden. You might just find yourself with a lifelong hobby. For most people, beekeeping grows into a passion.

Get Closer to Nature

 

Backyard gardens can offer a welcome supply of nectar and pollen for honeybees.

If you decide to pass putting on a beekeeper’s suit, merely keeping a backyard bee garden is another good deed you can do for the honeybees. With rapid urban development limiting their foraging habitat, backyard gardens can offer a welcome supply of nectar and pollen for honeybees.

Cultivating plants that will attract bees is the most important task of a bee gardener. Choose flowers that bloom successively over the spring, summer, and fall seasons such as coreopsis, Russian sage, or germander in order to provide pollen and nectar resources to the native bees of all seasons. If you’re not sure what to choose, you can always check with a local garden center for their advice on “bee-friendly” florals. To improve bee visitation, the garden should contain large patches of like flowers planted in close proximity to one another. Diversity is a key factor in keeping bee gardens buzzing. Researchers have found that more bees will be drawn to gardens with ten or more species of attractive plants.

As you diversify your garden, keep part of it wild because bees prefer that to a manicured space. Go for a “planted by nature” effect rather than a perfectly pruned garden. Remember: bees don’t discriminate between weeds and cultivated flowers, so let those dandelions grow.

And of course keep your bee garden free of pesticides — a danger in any garden. Some pesticides can kill the bee before it returns to the hive; other pesticides get carried back and can harm the rest of the hive.

If, after all of your hard work, you’re still not seeing bees in your garden, it’s not a wasted effort. Growing a pesticide-free garden is also good for you if you’re growing fruits and vegetables. Robert Mendela, President of the Backyard Beekeepers Association, says, “Even if there isn’t a hive of honeybees within a couple of miles of your garden, gardening brings the grower closer to nature and closer to realizing that what s/he grows is more nutritious and tasty than the ‘factory-ized,’ perfect, unblemished, and perhaps pesticide-covered” produce.

Even if you don’t have a green thumb, buying pesticide-free foods at the market also protects humans and bees from pesticide poisons.

Give the Bees a Voice

“Something the average person can do,” says Mendela, “is to write to their senators and representatives in congress on the federal level and to do the same on the state level to support funding of honeybee research. This support has fallen off over the years.”

The news focus on CCD makes it an ideal time to put pressure on politicians to reinstate laws that used to prevent importing bees into the country and transporting them across state borders.

Large or small, any effort you make to help bees or increase awareness is a step towards healthy bees, healthy crops, and, consequently, healthy humans.

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21 comments

#1

I’am off to the garden center to buy bee-friendly florals and plant them anywhere I can find bee
activity. I was horrified watching the broadcast and my Senator, along with my local officials, will be contacted.

#2

Just enjoyed the Documentary about the plight of the Bee’s. I have a large flower garden tha the bee’s love, and I love to have them. Two years ago they were under my porch, then they went away and I think they are back again. I hope so. Thanks for the very informative program. i will keep updated with PBS

#3

Thank you PBS and Doug Schultz for raising awareness of the plight of this truly wonderful and awesome creature. I have fond memories, in my childhood, of my dad in the bee suit. He was a backyard bee keeper. I can’t imagine a world without the honey bee, we are blessed to have them in our presence.

#4

I’m getting bees, planting bee friendly plants and, am worried about all pesticides used by everyone around. Hopefully, more people will do the same. The cause of CCD will be of major concern for me!

#5

I’ve been following CCD for a while now. I’m not a Bee Keeper but I’ve been interested in bees since I saw a natural bee hive exhibit at the County Fair. The other week I found a honey bee on the ground when I went to check my mail. It was obvious something was wrong. I tried to find a College or University that was involved in the research but couldn’t find any. I then called a local television station and was given the name of the local Bee Keeper Assoc. President. When I called her she said there was now worrries about CCD in our area. The bee died and I through it away. Now I’m worried the bee could have helped in the research but I was waved off by someone ignorant, apathetic or, God forbid, hoping to proffit from CCD.

#6

In the past year I have found many dead bees around my house, from honey bees to yellow jackets and carpenter pees. We have a great pesticide free environment. I have been very concerned about this issue and have looked into beekeeping in the past. After watching the documentary, I am going to be more aggressive in finding out how I can keep a hive.

#7

I saw this documentary on PBS today and it opened my eyes to just how amazing these little creatures are, and how life as we know it here on planet earth would not exist without them. I feel so sad that they are disappearing! Your documentary has really prompted me to learn more ,and do all that I can to get involved in raising awareness and helping the bees survive. Thank you.

#8

We live in Michigan in an American four square home made out of block and have thousands of honeybees living in the walls of our home. We would like to get rid of them but do not want to kill them and are afraid our whole interior walls will have to be taken down to get to the bees. Does anyone know how the bees in my home can be safely taken somewhere to survive?

#9

I am a third generation beekeeper living in a primarily suburban area. One of the problems any discussion of becoming a beekeeper must address is local ordnances. In many communities city ordnances prohibit or severely limit beekeeping. Add to that a core misunderstanding of these gorgeous creatures among the public and the novice beekeeper will find themselves and their hives quickly the subject of much attention and controversy. Thank you for this episode. I hope it helps to educate all those who are “frightened of bees” a bit. They are amazing, fascinating and delightfully gentle insects who bless us with gorgeous flowers, plump fruit, beauty, and then honey on top of it all.
To Dawn: if you have bees in your house call the fire department. Most fire departments have a “swarm list” of beekeepers who will remove bees from your property. You may have to pay to have the walls repaired but the beekeepers should be able to get the bees out. Good luck.
Thanks again Nature and PBS.

#10

Albert Einstein said, “If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe then man would only have four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man.” Lets hope and pray this doesn’t happen. I’ve contacted both local and federal officials today requesting more money to research CCD as well as federal assistance for the wonderful men and women who are losing their bee’s to this dreadful disease.

#11

I thoroughly enjoyed this video, and I will contact state and national reps. to ask for more funding to research this terrible problem.
I am a second grade teacher and will begin teaching about bees in August when we return to school.
Thank you very much!

#12

Taking free beekeeping lessons this summer and helping a neighbor with her old hives means I will be ready to begin with my own hives before next spring….I teach high school biology and I hope that my students will enjoy how I will incorporate this into our lessons. Since many schools are now requiring students to complete community projects before graduation, please involve your local beekeepers in getting students to consider bee gardens or even backyard beekeeping.

#13

I believe that current beekeeping methods are part of the problem with today’s bee population decline.

Here’s why… stress = disease (un ease)

Stress makes any living organism susceptible to diseases by weakening the natural immune system of that living organism. There are bacteria’s and virus’s in our environment, but nature has already given the bees everything they need to fight the bacteria and virus’s off to survive. It is our own fault they are getting sick because have stressed them to death.

We have stressed and weakened our current bee population by

#1 cloning queen bees and not letting nature create natural bio diversity.

#2 building hives that are primarily geared towards honey production and not bee preservation. Using current hive technology stresses the hive. Bees produce honey as their food for winter. If we put them in an environment where their food storage is being taken and we feed them sugar water in the winter it causes major stress on the colony. Sugar water is not a substitute for raw honey. Bee keepers steal the honey from the bees during the summer (stressing the bees to produce more) and feed them sugar water during the winter. If you took away quality food from humans and forced them to eat only fast food, they would get sick and die too.

#3 moving the hives around the country (and world) on the back of semi trucks and airplanes causes more stress. The hives should be locally kept and not moved to pollinate crops around the country. Moving the hives is just another stress that is making the bee population weak and susceptible to disease.

#4 Pesticides

#5 we have over planted massive crops of the same plant in one area. Bees like humans need a diverse diet to stay healthy.

There are many more factors at play, but I want everyone to know that this is a problem that we created and we can easily solve together. I am aware of solutions to each one of the problems listed above. Antibiotics and anti viral solutions are only temporary patches that take lots of time and money to develop and they will fail in the end. Work with nature and the problem will be resolved.

#14

I should clarify that I am talking about commercial beekeeping.

#15

Thank you for bringing that up. When i saw the bees crated up for shipping like frieght i couldnt believe it! how can they even keep them alive? Are we as a species actually going to allow agribuisness, pesticide makers , monsanto, KILL OUR PLANET?! I work as a gardener and will join a local bee keeping group to encourage our clients to let us keep bees for their gardens. We are all organic and all of our clients have vegetable gardens. we have bee activity but not crazy with honeybees like it used to be. I wonder are there studies on “organic bees” local not that crazy large scale duh of course its the cloned queens!!! why do they think thats going to be ok?
thank you for the program getting the story out there showing the populace this horrible situation.
im gonna get positive and vocal about it create a buzz!!

#16

I’ve watched “Natures- The Silence of the bee”, and have just read “A Spring without Bees” by Michael Schackler.
I’ve been keeping bees for the past 43 years, and this has been my worst year.
I started the spring with 30 hives and installed another 20 packages ( using equipment from deadout and now I only have 22 hive going right now.
Beekeepers be aware of where your bees are located as if you are near a golf course or farming operation that uses pesticides and most are using IMD. You not only will lose your bees come next spring , but you equipment will be containated with IMD. And when you put new packages into that equipment, those bees will die and/or develop a poor colony and die within two months.
This material acts just like Penn-Cap M.
We have to stop the use of all these strong Chemical.

#17

I just watched the documentary about bees ( the Silence of the Bees), and am now very concerned. I know that every year the blueberry insustry here imports millions of bees ( I live in New Brunswick, canada), and it always seemed to me to be a great way of allowing diseases to spread quickly over wide areas, while perhaps even causing local populations of bees to somehow loose whatever it was that allowed them to survive the local conditions. I know of one Canadian province ( nova scotia)that prohibts the importation of bees, and perhaps this is not a bad thing.
The problem of colony colapse seems to be a global one, and with it beeing such an urgent matter, is there much international cooperation in finding the cause and doing something about it, instead of just protecting each countries national interests ?
I also feel that certain ( not going to mention any names) chemical/ pesticide/ seed producing multinationals should be taken to task for what they do to our world.Maybe they won’t be happy until we are totally dependant on roundup ready soy ( or perhaps geneticaly altered bees that are resistent to ccd and owned by the company).
It’s also important to teach our kids about bees, etc. , as thier demise will be devestating to us all, and kids need to grow up learning respect for nature.

#18

I have seen the Silence of the Bees and thought it was a super program and well done ! … This June 2008 I had a feral swarm move into the base of my oak tree. Since then, I have become a backyard Bee-Rancher/Beekeeper. I am doing my part to help out the ladies and they have in return provided me with some of the Largest and Sweetest Blackberries I have ever seen and tasted. Of course the ” ladies ” are doing their part in pollinating the rest of my garden and my neighbors gardens. My Almond crop suffered this years due to missing Bees this year. It was too cold for any Bees to fly too my trees but now that I have several hives now located on my property, next year should be a much better year. Thanks to the Silence of The Bees program, it has opened my eyes and my neighbors eyes to what is taking place on the Planet and in our gardens. I have always been suspect but that show was the proof of the pudding so to speak. I am not so surprised that we “All Knowing” humans have done a huge disservice to the planet in how we live our day to day lives. It is way past high time we started taking better care of this planet or we will get kicked off of it in a very big way and it will not be a very pleasant way when it happens. There is no where else for us to go so we had better get it together very soon and STOP MAKING EXCUSES for why we cannot do it sooner. Sooner is better then later. There becomes a “Breaking Point” where it will become too late to repair the Damage we have done to the Planet as STUPID HUMANS. We are very DANGEROUSLY close to that Breaking Point, in my opinion. I have been doing my small part in reversing any damage I might have contributed over the years. It is very easy to do and for the most part it doesn’t cost any more to do it right then it does to do it WRONG ! … In fact, it cost more to do it WRONG ! … Think about it … The cost to reverse the damage we have done as mindless humans stumbling around this planet has cost us dearly. We could still loose out on this Planet. We are not out of danger yet ! … we could still loose our Honey Bees and all the other pollinators and then what do you think we will be left to eat to survive ? … NOT MUCH ! I think for starts, that Commercial Beekeeping should be required to remain a local business, everywhere. It would cut down on the transmittal of diseases and viruses to start with. It would definitely cut down on fuel costs required for the moving of hundreds of thousands of Bees up and down both the East and West Coasts.Hopefully, it would get more people to become “Local Beekeepers” and provide more local resources and help out local economies. It would also help with “localizing” diseases and viruses, making it a much easier task for those who do the research and testing to see how far and wide problems spread naturally instead of being moved around by ( once again ) stupid humans. Personally, I think everyone has the right to run a business without interference or intrusion by ANY government. … BUT … that all stops when people become too greedy or overstep their boundaries. In a way, I feel commercial Beekeepers have in essence overstepped those boundaries. They have directly contributed to the wide spread problems the Bees now face.

As the saying goes … ” Think Globally … Act Locally “.

I can only hope and wish that more people would become Backyard Beekeepers / Bee-Ranchers. It can only do more good then harm and it is both easy and very enjoyable. I love to go out in the evening and sit with my dogs and watch the ladies carrying their loads back to the hives. Its very interesting to see all the different colors of pollen they carry. Its almost like watching the ” Rainbow ” being carried into the hive in little bits and pieces. Like the Bees … I like to stop and smell the flowers !

#19

In WV the state beekeepers has gotten the WV state legislature involved quite a bit. In past years they’ve help purchase medications for us. Increased the budget to hire more bee inspectors. This year had a cost sharing to purchase packages of honeybees. Now I’m please that PBS aired this program on the internet since I have no other way of seeing it on TV. I hope you will continue to air updates on this important problem.

WV Beekeeperes webmaster

#20

i would like to keep bees ihave an idea of using brown japenese knot weed tied together i am going to try this and hope it will work to save more bees .

#21

Bees-Honey-Life,,bee

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