city bees interview
Transcription
city bees interview
City Bees R obert MacKimmie is making the most of San Fansisco’s ever blooming landscape and its wealth of plant diversity by setting up and caring for bee hives on roof tops and in peoples yards. After a day of examining Robert carefully working with one of his bee hives on a rooftop balcony in San Fransisco we sat down at the The Beanery coffee shop near the Inner Sunset Farmers’ Market to discuss his career as an urban farmer and his love for the community. Photo by: Anna Buss Interview with Robert Mackimmie, by: Anna Buss. What is so great about bees? Everything about bees is total goodness. Bees pollinate 1/3 of what we eat. Every food that has color is bee pollinated. Bees also gather pollen, collect propolis for use in the hive, make beeswax, and of course honey. Bees consume lots of honey and when we help them to be healthy and prosperous, they generate enough extra to share with the community. I always put the bees first, and never overharvest their diligent work. did a bit of volunteer work with Spencer Marshall, helping him with his hives. Once I was able to provide him with city honey I joined him in selling honey at his stand in the Ferry Plaza Market. One day at the market, Eric the apple guy suggested that I get my own Agricultural Certificate, so I did. I remained very serious about bees from my first hive, but always kept a real job. A dozen years after starting, when the Great Recession crashed upon us, local food was becoming more of an important focus. In 2009, the new Inner Sunset Farmers’ Market was starting up at the perfect time. It was the perfect location which mutually benefits both the local community and farmers. At the point people were really focused on what they needed most in life: food, water, shelter, and community. How did you get into this field of work? I took a class and eventally How does the community play a role in your City Bees operation and vice versa? The community makes this operation happen. Much of my honey comes from hives that I have placed in the backyards, decks or roofs of customers that I have met at the market. Does the locality of the honey make a difference? I go by the testimonies from my customers. Here is a great one: “ I gave my son a teaspoon of the Inner Sunset honey per day, and within a week his allergies were completely gone.” So yes, it makes a huge difference. Honey includes pollens from the trees and flowers that cause the allergies. Using it is reminiscent of inoculating the body with a vaccine. At least that’s the experience that my customers bring back to me when they come for the next batch. During the winter, people were dosing themselves with honey to get through their colds. People want to have hives in their backyards once they realize that it will help them with allergies, and improve their overall health. A common interaction with my customers goes something like this: Customer: “ Instead of 17th at Lincoln, I’ll wait for the 15th at Judah” Robert: “Are you looking for the East or West side of 15th Avenue?” You can’t get much more local than that! Having such localized honey helps to foster a connection between these urbanites and their local ecology. People tend to think more about spraying herbicides, fungicides and pesticides on their plants once they realize everything is connected, and that their yard may become part of the food chain, part of what they put on a spoon, and into their mouth. and particulates in the air can’t contamnate the honey. The pollen is created in the plant, and the bees get the nectar through an extraction process, which means there is little to no exposure between the nectar and outside environment. The bees might experience some contamination if they are feeding on crops that use systemic pesticides, such as Neonicitinoids. Corn and soy seeds are treated with these chemicals to ward off pests. The Neonicitinoids come back to the hive in the pollen, because that is a product of the plant. How does urban beekeeping differ from rural bee keeping? • There are always plants blooming in the city, so bees gather nectar almost year round. • There is remarkable plant diversity throughout the city which allows for endless variations of completely unique honey. grew up surrounded by 10 acres of orange groves, so I was always “in” nature, with an awareness of crops and seasons. I like to say, “I grew up with one foot on the farm, one foot in the city.” Now I farm the city. “Taste the View,” is one of my admonitions. What is it like to be a farmer in this modern day society? I feel very fortunate to be a farmer for so many reasons. It allows me to fully experience a strong interdependent relationship with nature every single day. Photo by: Anna Buss “Everything about bees is total goodness. Bees pollinate 1/3 of what we eat. Every food that has color is bee pollinated.” • Again, it provides effective allergy relief because of the localized plant pollens in honey • Large sprayed mono crops in rural areas leave nothing for bees to forage on – it’s a food desert for them. Does pollution from the city air affect the honey? Not at all. Pollution It doesn’t kill the bees immediately, but it is suspected that the non-fatal low doses ends up impacting the offspring, and eventually the navigational abilities of the foraging bees. Do you have a history with agriculture? Some of my great-grandparents were farmers and my retired grand father was a ‘gentleman farmer’ - I It is very fulfilling to provide the community with food which will influence their health with very positive benefits. I truly believe that the recent economic hardship has helped to shape people’s view of our food system, and has helped people to appreciate farming’s vitally important role in society. Where do you keep your hives in the city? The majority of my hives are in other people’s backyards. Often, there may only be room for one or a few hives per location in the city, but this helps to spread the pollination around and avoids overwhelming particular forage landscapes. I keep eight colonies on the roof of Bi-Rite Market in the Mission, and have installed four hives on the roof of the new Bi-Rite Market on Divisidero. Those are among my few sizable apiaries. I also have hives at a Cole Valley elementary school, which is great because I get the chance to teach the kids about bees, and where honey comes from. Bees are now on their school crest and have become an integral part of the school’s identity, far beyond being just a part of their science curriculum. It’s so important that kids become connected to nature and our more natural food systems. Are there complications or challenges when keeping bees in the city? Just like the byproduct of horses in New York City around 1900, one of the major bee irritants is little yellow dots, which is bee poop. People assume that it would be bee stings, but that’s never an issue. When the bees leave the hive on their way to mate or find nectar, they have waited until they get outside the hive and sometimes little dots land on people’s car, which is nothing more than digested The real challenge of keeping bees successfully is “Varroa destructor,” the parsitic Varroa mite, originally from Asia, and similar to a flea or tick. They reproduce in the bee brood and weaken the early development of the bee by sucking their hemlymph, their bee blood. A multitude of bacterial diseases and rapidly evolving viruses can cause deformed wing virus (DWV) and other devastating bee diseases, ultimately collapsing most bee colonies one by one. 98% of urban bee losses are caused by mite infestations. With the recent popularity of beekeeping, it is overwhelmingly important that amateur beekeepers use proper organic methods to control mite infestations. Many new beekeepers want to keep bees “naturally,” but often don’t realize the extent to which overdevelopment and globalization have eliminated any natural ecosystems that the bees once had. Humans have impacted what is required to keep bees sustainable, and there is a lot that we must do to be supportive of the bee ecosystem. Any “do-nothing” technique offers no control over the mite populations, which are present in all bee colonies. That “do-nothing” mindset is a major problem. The brutal biological facts are that mite populations grow exponentially as the year progresses, until eventually the mites outnumber the bees, causing gruesome and catastrophic collapses minimally tended hives most always create epidemic levels of rampant disease which can be spread far and wide when bees forage. As a hive collapses, deformed and infected young bees are thrown out of the hive, lowering the population further, at which point opportunistic stronger colonies are scouting for easy sources of food. The compromised hive’s location, once discovered, is communicated to the stronger hive via the bee “Waggle Dance,” the two-part mathematical description of distance and direction to the food source. A raiding party is assembled and they invade the weak colony, bringing back all pillaged honey. Along with the honey comes the bloodthirsty Varroa mites. If the beekeeper isn’t regularly monitoring hives for mite population levels, the stronger hive can collapse within a month or two. It’s very sad, financially devastating, and totally avoidable. The very real lesson for all beekeepers is that, unlike the contained experience of having a fish aquarium in the living room, one’s beekeeping practices in backyard beehives can cause severe and deadly impact to other bee populations within five miles, in each direction. If people don’t take control of their hives, it affects everyone’s bees. Most beekeepers don’t like the message of required responsibility, so I have changed my tactics to simply expecting that everyone else will be collapsing “In 2009, the new Inner Sunset Farmers’ Market was starting up at the perfect time. It was the perfect location which mutually benefits both the local community and farmers.” pollen. Anyone outside the city would laugh that this is an issue. of individual bee colonies. Instead of providing a benefit to bees, from mites, and I need to constantly protect my hives from incoming parasites. Thus far, I have been proven correct. I get my mite levels very low and then experience wave after wave of incoming mites. A “sugar shake” test, with 300 bees in a Mason Jar with some powdered sugar knocks all of the mites loose, and I can count how many mites on hitchhiking on the 300 bees. 3 mites per 300 bees is a 1% infestation. If there are 10 mites per 300 bees, I’m headed for serious trouble. If there are 25 mites per 300 bees, more than 8%, that hive will begin a major collapse in about her eggs, and not enough empty comb for the workers to store their nectar. Swarms are almost always a result of poor beekeeper practices. What are some of your favorite honeys? •The Mission District’s Date Palm Blossom - a subtle but rich flavor, like an autumn fruit, which the bees gather from the miles of Canary Island Date Palms along Dolores Street in the Mission District. (This is the Bi-Rite Market Rooftop honey from 18th Street.) about honey? •Honey lasts forever. King Tut has honey in his tomb. He didn’t eat much of it, but it was as tasty as the day it was put there. •Alexander the Great was killed on one of his military campaigns. His body was preserved in honey until his sarcophagus was returned home. •Honey will crystalize - this is a sign that it is real and good. The liquid honey on grocery store shelves has been heated to more “San Francisco is THE most unique honey city in the world. We have a one-of-a-kind 7x7 mile peninsula, surrounded on three sides by water, with hills and valleys to make up endless microclimates - and the entire ecosystem is severely influenced by the thick layer of marine fog which brings chill and moisture in the summertime.” a month, and if there are 50 mites per 300 bees, not uncommon in late summer and early fall, the hive will be completely dead in about 3 weeks. It’s completely avoidable through attentive organic hive management, and that means much more than “being natural and doing nothing.” When mite levels are kept low, the bees are able to be the magical, intelligent beings that they are, able to express their joy in being diligent, doing the extraordinary work of pollination while gathering nectar, pollen, propolis, creating beeswax and curing honey. Everything bees do is positive and remarkable. Bees are the intersection of being systemic biological creatures, who happen to be intelligent wildlife doing what that they want to, not always as the beekeeper would prefer. And bee swarms? Totally caused by the beekeeper who has not provided enough space for the queen to lay than 150 degrees and has been ultra-filteredto remove all pollens. •Ord Street in the Castro District Why remove all the good stuff? was immediately a legend, being Honey has more enzymes than light in color, with remarkably any other food, but temperatures distinctive flavors, and very deep over 105 degrees kill those magical satisfaction to the taste buds. The host moved to a new neighborhood, enzymes. Hive temperature is 96 degrees. My goal is to never take so the bees had to depart also. honey above that temperature zone. •Golden Gate Park neighborhoods •Royal Jelly - contains amino acids - many locations within a block or and proteins. It chemically evolves two of Golden Gate Park end up labelled with titles such as “Bliss” or the queen bees’ reproductive “Butterscotch” - the local Eucalyptus system, while leaving all of the female worker bee reproductive groves provide a stunning systems immature and never able to background flavor for all city function fully. Royal Jelly is honeys. Very creamy and buttery. •Specific neighborhoods often have remarkable to taste, but better used little sunny locations which provide in making new bees. •Bee Pollen is one of the super a paradise, enhancing bee health and vigor. Twin Peaks with its great foods groups - one could supposedly live on bee pollen and view acts as a launching pad for foragers. The Mission District with water. Vitamins, minerals, amino acids, fatty acids, high in protein, its Banana Belt of warmth, when and has enzymes that any medical other parts of the city are deep in student would be amazed by. down parkas, always tastes more floral. •Honey is anti-bacterial, anti-microbial, cured by the bees to around 15% moisture, it is actually Any other random interesting facts too dry for bacteria to grow in. Many old wives’ tales about the medical benefits of honey have been proven in recent years Australia actually uses honey as medicine, package and approved by their medical community. It is especially good for use with burn victims to keep infections minimized, and flesh wounds. Scrape your leg mountain biking - “Sweet!” •The most amazing honey fact: It tastes great! • Bottom photo by: Greg Zeroun Top photos by: Anna Buss