My neighbours are doing it. Michelle Obama is doing it. They’re keeping bees! The National Beekeepers’ Association of New Zealand is highlighting the importance of bees, and this month is Bee Aware Month.
Bees around the world are in trouble. A world without bees would be a very bleak place indeed. Much of our food depends on pollination by bees as do our gardens and a lot of other products we rely on. Over $5 billion of New Zealand’s agricultural exports also depend on bees. Bee numbers worldwide are in decline and we must do all that we can to save them before it’s too late.
So how can you help? Easy ways you can give these hardworkers a happy life include planting bee friendly plants, and being careful when using pesticides in your garden, or better still stopping using them altogether.
You could also start your own hive. The Beekeepers’ Association has helpful information, and in Christchurch you can now rent a hive and have someone else come and do all the work for you. The library of course has a large number of beekeeping titles that will help make your garden and your hive a bee mecca.
Don’t forget also to check CINCH for contact details of beekeeping clubs.
I am bee-ing good. I have dug up a small patch of grass and sown bee and butterfly friendly wildflower seeds. All will bee well….if the blackbirds leave the patch be. 😦
I’m sure it will bee fine
Bee-lieve it or not, I am the worlds worst gardener. I plant stuff, then it kind of gets left to fend for its self. If the plant survives and flowers, the bees and buterflies think I am the best gardener in the world. When the flower go to seed and look scruffy, the wax-eyes think I’m the best gardener in the world. The neighbours who have lovely looking gardens shake their heads and tut-tut when they see my sad and sorry garden. I wonder if they have bees, bumble beas, butterflies, wax eyes and snails (for the blackbirds)?
And here was I thinking that I was the one who had the award for the worst gardener… I now feel a lot better thanks!