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Locality: Bowmanville, Ontario

Phone: +1 289-928-0252



Address: 2370 Nash Road L1C3K4 Bowmanville, ON, Canada

Likes: 82

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Windsong Apiary 24.09.2020

Not surprisingly the first shoe has dropped from the Ford Government. They have backed off on their policy goal to reduce the use of NNIs by 85%% and are proposing not to even require reporting of treated seed sales. https://www.theglobeandmail.com//article-ontario-is-look/

Windsong Apiary 20.09.2020

There was a time when almost every rural British family who kept bees followed a strange tradition. Whenever there was a death in the family, someone had to go... out to the hives and tell the bees of the terrible loss that had befallen the family. Failing to do so often resulted in further losses such as the bees leaving the hive, or not producing enough honey or even dying. Traditionally, the bees were kept abreast of not only deaths but all important family matters including births, marriages, and long absence due to journeys. If the bees were not told, all sorts of calamities were thought to happen. This peculiar custom is known as telling the bees. The practice of telling the bees may have its origins in Celtic mythology that held that bees were the link between our world and the spirit world. So if you had any message that you wished to pass to someone who was dead, all you had to do was tell the bees and they would pass along the message. The typical way to tell the bees was for the head of the household, or goodwife of the house to go out to the hives, knock gently to get the attention of the bees, and then softly murmur in a doleful tune the solemn news. Little rhymes developed over the centuries specific to a particular region. In Nottinghamshire, the wife of the dead was heard singing quietly in front of the hive, The master's dead, but don't you go; Your mistress will be a good mistress to you. In Germany, a similar couplet was heard, Little bee, our lord is dead; Leave me not in my distress. But the relationship between bees and humans goes beyond superstition. It’s a fact, that bees help humans survive. 70 of the top 100 crop species that feed 90% of the human population rely on bees for pollination. Without them, these plants would cease to exist and with it all animals that eat those plants. This can have a cascading effect that would ripple catastrophically up the food chain. Losing a beehive is much worse than losing a supply of honey. The consequences are life threatening. The act of telling the bees emphasizes this deep connection humans share with the insect. - via amusingplanet.com Art: The Bee Friend, a painting by Hans Thoma (18391924)

Windsong Apiary 10.09.2020

Notice of OBA Annual General Meeting The Annual General Meeting (AGM) of Members of the Ontario Beekeepers’ Association will take place Friday, November 15th, 2...019 at the Holiday Inn Burlington Hotel & Conference Centre 3063 South Service Road, Burlington, ON L7N 3E9 as part of the OBA’s Fall Conference. The meeting will begin at 1:15 pm. Note that proposed Constitution & Bylaw changes will be presented for Member approval, Election of Board Directors will take place, and Resolutions may be considered, in addition to Reports & Updates from the OBA Board of Directors. Nominations and Resolutions submission deadline is next Friday, November 8, 2019 at 5 pm.

Windsong Apiary 07.09.2020

Happy Halloween

Windsong Apiary 28.08.2020

<3 O:) "...three solutions are proposed with the hope that they can be done in a short time: Prohibit, not reduce, the use of toxic pesticides.... Promote completely natural agricultural alternatives. Perform constant research and monitoring of the health, welfare and conservation of bees.." See more

Windsong Apiary 19.07.2020

I know it can be hard! If you’re a bee revolutionary though, it’s the right thing to do! Otherwise, just make sure you’re planting tons for our pollinators!!

Windsong Apiary 30.06.2020

Great job #savethebees