Don't think of retiring from the world until the world will
be sorry that you retire. I hate a fellow whom pride or cowardice or laziness
drives into a corner, and who does nothing when he is there but sit and growl.
Let him come out as I do, and bark.
--- Samuel Johnson ---

| Other Diary Pages | |||||
| 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 |
| M A M J J A S O N D | J F M A M J J A S O N D | J F M A M J J A S O N D | J F M A M J J A S O N D | J F M A M J J A S O N D | J F M A M J J A S O N D |
| Current Diary Page | Search | Home | |||||
Thursday 10 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago | Forum | Sale |
Write me
Today : Sunny with afternoon cloudy periods.
30 percent chance of afternoon showers or thunderstorms. High 23. UV index 7 or
high.
Tonight : 30 percent chance of evening showers or thunderstorms otherwise
clear. Low 10.
Normals for the period : Low 10. High 23.
Friday 11 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me
In spite of the fact that our
accountant recommended that we stop selling things for the rest of this year, I
sold my entire extracting line today: four Kelley extractors, and the Dakota
Gunness, plus extensions, and the Fager wax press. I just cannot see the
sense in letting good equipment sit around, doing nothing, when people can use
it. I'll figure out the tax problem later.
For that matter, we will sell -- or even rent -- supers, too, if people need them, and I'm sure they do. With high prices for honey seeming certain to continue, beekeepers need lots of supers, 6 or seven standard boxes (including broods) per hive to get maximum production. When honey prices are up, it pays to have enough supers. Being short even one super per hive could cost three times the price of the super itself in lost honey.
The price of a drawn
super comes back three times over in just one month! Where else can a
beekeeper find an investment like that? I realize many are short of cash,
and afraid to invest until they see the hives plugged up, but I'd hate to have
supers sitting in my shed while others are losing income due to a shortage of
supers. We'll trade for honey, or discuss terms, if necessary. All
our supers were used last year, and they can sit for a year or two, if
necessary, without much deterioration, but -- once again -- I believe that
things are meant to be used, not stored, and we want to clean up our yard, so
we plan to move out what we can.
Ellen & I had planned to take our motorhome for a six week run to the East Coast, but we've decide that, with the yard cleanup and other pressures, and the fact that I am not convinced that the MH is ready to go, we will break the summer up into several trips. I'll take 10 days and fly to the family cottage in Muskoka, leaving Ellen to hold the fort -- and finish her mural on the community hall -- and later we'll both fly east to Rhode Island to see Jon and Sarah and their two kids. We'll then drive up to Nova Scotia and PEI, and spend time with friends there. I had been very much looking forward to attending the EAS meeting in Maine, and even scheduled our trip around it, but have changed my mind.
Over the years, I've attended many different beekeeping events across the continent and always found myself welcome. I had thus assumed the EAS meeting to be organized as an open public event, but I have now come to conclude that if I were to attend the EAS meeting, it would be almost like crashing a family party.
This realization dawned on me slowly. I was invited to speak at EAS last year, but had been unable to accept due to the fact that the EAS event is scheduled smack in the middle of our extraction season. Being retired now, and being -- theoretically at least -- free, I had therefore planned to attend this year. I'd put off pre-registration to the very last minute, assuming that it would be a breeze by internet, but found myself confused by the lack of info on the web registration pages when I finally tackled the job a few hours before the deadline. I'd then enquired on BEE-L, hoping to get some quick assistance before the deadline, but had drawn defensive comments from EAS people that puzzled me until I got this email from a highly placed EAS official, a query that clarified everything perfectly.
> Since you aren't a member, and haven't been, what expectations could
> you have....you don't get the NL, don't attend meetings and don't
> have a history with the group...
The penny dropped! Living in the West as long as I have -- and having fled Eastern society in my youth after discovering the egalitarian Western existence -- I had failed to note the 'Eastern' and 'Society' part of the EAS (Eastern Apicultural Society) name. I had actually somehow thought that EAS was the name of a meeting, not an actual society. I now stand corrected. Ooops!
If I did attend, I'd be tolerated -- and even feel welcomed, if I were to pay up, act grateful, and not ask questions -- but treated quite coldly if I were to reveal any expectations, or even to know in advance exactly what I was paying for or how things work. Although many EAS members apparently share the view that the event is for all, and welcome and encourage non-member and foreign participation, (some of that group also wrote me offering assistance) the core EAS group apparently think of it as a society event, in the somewhat exclusive Eastern sense of the term. Thus, it makes sense that the details of the program are a closely held secret, participants are expected to sign up blindly, and, although interlopers are tolerated, they are expected to know their place. If you know me, you know that is not my style, so I'd best stay away. Pity.
I pressure-washed Chris' boat today, and Dennis set up Dave's Dakota Gunness to check it out and lube it. Ruth and some friends from England had supper with us, then El & I went down with them to her place to pull fence posts. She'd sold her mobile home and wanted to take the fence with her. Bill and Fen came by in the evening also, to bring over Chris' boom.
Today : Sunny. Wind becoming south 20 km/h near noon. High 28. UV index 7 or high. / Tonight : Clear. Wind southeast 20 km/h becoming light this evening. Low 14. / Normals for the period : Low 10. High 23.
Saturday 12 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me
Jean and Chris are coming down today with the intent of doing some sailing. I also have to get ready to go East, but I've spent an hour or two on this diary.
I don't know if I will keep it up daily over the summer. Maybe I will, maybe I won't. I will be seeing beekeepers and discussing beekeeping issues over the summer and I do have in mind to write some articles about the co-ops and also about how the protectionist embargo maintained by the Eastern and small-time beekeepers who dominate the CHC has cost the Alberta rural economy at least $25,000,000 per year in direct revenue in recent years, and how the Alberta government is wasting effort trying to convince Alberta beekeepers to diversify into honey packing and making honey products -- a marginal and small-time opportunity -- when most of the potential bee pasture in Alberta goes to waste from lack of bees.
|
That's all for now.
Stay tuned to this spot for more, when I get over my inhibitions, stop holding it back, and tell you what I really think...
Today : Sunny. Wind becoming southwest 20 km/h this afternoon. High 29. UV index 7 or high. / Tonight : Clear. Wind southwest 20 km/h. Low 14. / Normals for the period : Low 10. High 23.
Sunday 13 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me
Today : Sunny with cloudy periods. Wind becoming west 20 km/h this afternoon. High 25. UV index 7 or high. / Tonight : Clear. Wind west 20 km/h becoming light near midnight. Low 11. / Normals for the period : Low 10. High 23.
Monday 14 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me
Monday : Sunny. Wind becoming west 30 km/h in the afternoon. High 23.
Chris and I left for the airport at 7AM, and by 5PM, I was in a rental car -- a Kia -- Headed for Port Carling. I arrived in time for supper with Mom, and my niece, Lindsay, who has been working in the Port this summer and is living here at Pine Hill.
Tuesday 15 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me
A day at the cottage. Ron & Joan dropped by. Heavy rain began in the afternoon and continued...
|
Hello Allen, I read your manifesto regarding the stupidity of maintaining a closed border with pleasure. I'm glad to hear your view seems to have changed as I did hear you question a California Package beekeeper at the ABA convention last fall. It appeared as though you did not believe his bees to be available in sufficient quantities, nor did you want any to come across to Alberta. Any how, I want to thank you for articulating a very strong economic viewpoint as well as undermining the current paranoid myths surrounding US bees. For several years now I've been wanting to expand and should be keeping 500 plus colonies, I'm struggling to keep 400 good producers, and like you said, I can't cash in at this point in time when honey prices are remarkable. With the open border I would try to forge a relationship with a reputable beekeeper down south to exchange bees in the fall and spring, He/She could take my bees south for the winter and return them in the spring along with his bees in late June just as the honey flow begins, that would be production. I would be the most profitable agricultural business in my area of cattle and grain, especially now due to sagging grain prices and the disaster in the beef industry. Thanks again I can see both sides of this issue, and, at the meeting mentioned above, I was questioning some rather emotional and extreme statements being made. As it happens, though, the speaker, Kevin, was prescient; varroa were subsequently found on New Zealand imports, in unacceptable numbers. The 'manifesto' was simply an exercise in playing the devil's advocate. My true position is actually somewhere on the middle of the debate. I think there is a place for some control on distribution of infected stock into uninfected areas, but I think these decisions need to be made on a local, and not national level. Mindless attachment to a one-size-fits-all approach at all costs is ridiculous, especially for a nation like Canada with a principal beekeeping region that is 3,000 miles broad (including several long areas that are unsuited to bees), and measures only a few hundred miles from North to South in most places. There are, a few other beekeeping regions, particularly islands, and isolated Northern districts in Ontario and the prairies, otherwise, the country is unsuited to intensive beekeeping to any great extent. In effect, we are made up of a number of distinct and isolated beekeeping regions with very different needs.
The emphasis on risk and not opportunity, and the blind insistence on a
national policy, have been increasingly costly to our industry, especially as
U.S. and Canadian management has largely adjusted to the pests. Although
health of bees is an important consideration, it is largely important for
economic reasons. When bee health takes precedence over all other economic
considerations, the tail begins to wag the dog, especially if the health risks
are readily manageable.
Blanket border closure served many of us in the past, when we were faced with unknown and unmanageable pests, but it is now a costly relic. It is time to forget the past and get on with the future. |
Today .. Sunny. High 26. UV index 7 or high. / Tonight .. A few clouds. Low 10. / Normals for the period .. Low 10. High 23.
Wednesday 16 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me
Another lazy day at the cottage. The weather is dull and cool; that's fine with me; it's perfect for tuning up this computer and resting up.
Mom and I went grocery shopping this morning, and this afternoon my brother and I plan to check the septic tank. After that, we're all headed to Bracebridge for supper.
I've been reflecting a bit more about the border issue and the thing that strikes me about the division of opinion, the more I think about it, is this: Generally those who feel most open, and least threatened by actual or or proposed bee importation are the most successful and informed beekeepers and younger beekeepers. The people who tend to be most opposed to bee importations tend to be regulators and other government people, side-liners, and hobbyists, and semi-successful -- basically subsistence beekeepers. I realize this is a generalization with many exceptions, but think about it... I'm often surprised to find that large, successful beekeepers, including many who are self-sufficient and do not need to import, have a generous and laissez-faire attitude on the subject. Even though they do not need imports personally, they can see the benefits of importation and have respect for others.
Today .. Sunny with cloudy periods. 60 percent chance of showers. Risk of a thunderstorm. Wind becoming south 20 km/h this morning. High 25. UV index 7 or high. / Tonight .. Clear. Wind southeast 30 km/h becoming light this evening. Low 12./ Normals for the period .. Low 10. High 23.
Thursday 17 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me

I awoke with a bit of a sore throat and a touch of cold, but felt up to going
places. We'd arranged to go to Holditchs', so Ron, Joan and I drove down
to Nicholsons' and John picked us up at the marina. They toured us through
the area, from the marine railway on the east, to the Post Severn Locks on the
west.
Today .. Sunny. High 27. UV index 7 or high. / Tonight .. Clear. Wind west 20 km/h becoming light this evening. Low 9. / Normals for the period .. Low 10. High 23.
Friday 18 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me
The cold hit me hard today, and, other than a run over to Ron's to help with the septic tank, I stayed here at Pine Hill and rested up.
On the way to Ron's, I happened to spot a 'Honey for Sale' sign, and stopped to chat. I met Graham Jeffries, a beekeeper with 115 hives in these parts and had a good visit.
Today .. Sunny. Wind becoming southeast 20 km/h this afternoon. High 29. UV index 7 or high. / Tonight .. A few clouds. Wind southeast 20 km/h becoming light this evening. Low 13. / Normals for the period .. Low 10. High 24.
Saturday 19 July 2003
One Year ago
| Two years ago |
Three Years ago |
Forum |
Sale |
Write me
Sick again. I stayed in bed until noon. I then slept again in the afternoon, but in the evening, I felt better. I was up until after midnight. I re-wrote the article I did earlier about the impact of border closure on Alberta beekeeping and the rural economy. It is now available in an easier-to-read version.
I had sent a preliminary, rough version of the above article to the CHC for comment when I first began writing it, but so far the silence has been deafening. I like to think that we debate issues, not personalities, in this industry and are above petty politics, but I often see signs that this may not be the case. I'd like to open an honest debate, and see all sides represented, heard, considered and accommodated. I know that where there is a will, there is a way.
I hear that things are drying up in Alberta and that the weather is very hot at home. I also heard that one of our buyers finally came for the last of his supers. Hmmm.
Ellen reports that Dennis has a job with a nearby neighbour for August. That works well for us, since we want to be away and we need someone there to watch the place, work the remaining bees and water our trees. We also need him in the fall. There are months of cleanup left to do.
Saturday .. Sunny. Becoming cloudy late in the day with 60 percent chance of showers. Wind becoming east 20 km/h late in the day. High 25.
<< Previous Page Next Page >>
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||