Saturday, July 8, 2006 4:34 AM CDT
To bee or not to bee
By NATHANIEL WEST, Staff Writer
Local beekeeper persists despite devastating honey bee parasites
From candy bar wrappers to pet supplies, backseats often serve as repositories for those items that reflect our passions.
So it’s only natural when a passerby does a doubletake upon glancing in the rear window of Roger Kull’s car.
After all, an opaque bottle labeled “bee feed” does tend to pique one’s curiosity.
No, it has nothing to do with spelling contests.
But Kull may be one of the few people for whom “buzzed” driving is not drunken driving.
And, unfortunately, their numbers grow fewer every year, as the spread of a parasite continues to plague honey bees and discourage beekeepers like Kull, a semi-retired science and math teacher from Strasburg.
However, despite having had to replace his entire bee colony this spring, thanks to the voracious parasitic mite, Kull has vowed to remain an apiarist. Not only has beekeeping proven to be a great source of honey (and the occasional bee sting), but Kull said it continually reminds him of nature’s splendor and complexity.
“A lot of people have given up because of the difficulties,” he said. “It’s a lot of work, and I don’t know why I enjoy it so much ... I just like God’s creatures at work. It’s really amazing to me.”
But another of God’s creatures, the Varroa mite, has made that work difficult.
First found in North America about 15 years ago, the parasites have since migrated to all of the contiguous states, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture report.
“The Varroa destructor, an external parasitic mite of the honey bee, is the number one production problem for the nation’s beekeeping industry,” according to the report.
“Beekeeping losses because of parasitic mites have resulted in fewer beekeepers and fewer colonies of honey bees nationwide.”
The parasite problem is so widespread that apiculture veterans like 102-year-old R. Waldo McBurney of Quinter, Kansas, agreed that it is “the hardest thing about being a beekeeper.”
In the National Honey Board’s summer 2005 newsletter, McBurney said the “heavy death losses” are among the greatest challenges to him and other beekeepers.
The mites completely wiped out Kull’s honey bee colony over the winter, forcing him to order new bees through the mail.
When he’s not sending the local postmaster into a panic, Kull gladly gets his bees instead from local residents who are just as happy to be rid of them.
In the past, he has been called to remove a half-dozen or more swarms of bees each year. But this year so far, he has only had two occasions to don his bee veil, lab coat and extra-long gloves to take away somebody else’s unwanted bees.
Kull attributed the decline of wild honey bees also to the parasitic mites, which make it hard for the bees to survive the winter.
Thus, this spring he was forced to purchase more than 8,000 bees from a company that guarantees the three pounds of insects will include a queen bee, which is vital to a colony’s longevity.
Kull now maintains a honey bee colony at his family’s farmhouse west of Strasburg.
Although he is training an apprentice beekeeper in Strasburg, Kull speculated he himself is one of the only remaining apiarists in his area.
“Any more, it’s just hard to keep the things alive,” he said.
And he has still never sold a jar of honey, which he just gives away or consumes himself.
“I just do it for fun,” Kull said. “And it makes real nice Christmas gifts.”
Contact Nathaniel West at nwest@jg-tc.com or 238-6860.
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Roger Kull, an amateur beekeeper from Strasburg, removes a section from his hive. Nathaniel West/ Staff
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Congrats! wrote on Apr 10, 2007 9:35 AM: