Historical Aspects of Beekeeping - Dr Malcolm Sanford
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- Опубліковано 9 лип 2024
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#beekeeping #history #honeybees
Beekeeping is a lifestyle. In this interview, the last video of our video series, Dr. Malcolm Sanford tell us a little bit about the changes in beekeeping in the last 50 years.
Check out Dr. Sanford book giveaway (5 books). Video 1- • Beekeeping book - Stor...
Check out Dr. Sanford's website - Apis Apis Information Resource Center - (Video 2) - • Beekeeping resource - ...
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Photo credit: USDA Honey Bee Lab in beltsville (Thanks you)
I appreciate your time. Thanks for watching!
InsideTheHive.TV "The Show About Bees"
Entertaining and informative video! Thanks, Dr. Sanford for sharing your knowledge.
You are welcome.
I guess it's pretty off topic but do anyone know of a good site to stream newly released tv shows online?
@Elliott Amari i watch on flixzone. Just google for it =)
@Emilio Gerardo yea, I've been using FlixZone for since march myself :)
@Emilio Gerardo Thank you, signed up and it seems to work :) Appreciate it!
Love this
It seems like a discussion about how to prop up the canary in the coal mine.
Good to hear the historical side very interesting .
I am glad you enjoyed.
Great video. Thanks.
absolutely great information.
Thanks. More coming soon.
Really enjoyed this!
Glad to hear that. Let me know other topics you might be interested in.
Great discussion. Dr. Sanford reminds me of Mickey Rooney with his fun personality. I'm in Kentucky. Due to our proximity to the Ohio River, the water ways tend to dominate our history. Commonly accepted idea here locally is that honey bees arrived around 1780 as they followed the westward expansion of the frontier. The bees here are thought to have originated from the earliest colonial period, approximately 1609. If what Dr. Sanford proposes and that honey bees were introduced by Spaniards, then that could mean bees were introduced to America much sooner, even as early as the early 1500's. Be interesting to learn more about the expansion of the honey bee in America.
You are right. There are a good chance the bees have reached America earlier than people think. I am planning to visit Saint Augustine to look at the logbooks. Let's see what I can get. Thanks for watching it.
@@InsideTheHiveTV Fascinating. I have not studied the history of Florida. One would think that the first Spanish Catholic missions would have likely brought honey bees as the beeswax was very important for the candles which play an important part of the Catholic religious life. This was one of Brother Adams tasks at the Buckfast Abbey... providing wax for candles.
@@InsideTheHiveTV Something that has also always intrigued me...How did the successfully bring bees over on the sailing vessels of the 16th 17th, and 18th century. Those were very difficult crossings.
Also another consideration...the early French in Canada. I wonder when and if they brought over honey bees...again would have likely been associated with Catholic missions and parishes more so than in British holdings. Just some thoughts.
Brett Green I’ll be researching the subject. I have other people around me also interested in this conversation. Let me know if you have more info or ideas. Cheers.
@@InsideTheHiveTV Thank you Humberto. I agree with Dr. Tom Seeley's assessment that feral bees overcame varroa. This leads me to conclude we have very old genetics in our feral stock tracing back to the earliest hives. I have become so confident in this that I no longer buy in new queens. I am seeing equal or superior potential in my locally open bred queens versus the queens I buy. Look forward to hearing what you discover.
please more about the Russian program.
It is coming! hold tight. I am connecting with the right people for this one. Let's see if I can make it happen.
@@InsideTheHiveTV thanks
If I understand correctly, today’s beekeeping should be called not management of bees but management of deseases..?🥴🥴🥴
You have a point here.
Do apiaries comprising of less than 8 hives have a virus or mite issue? I have to wonder if the management solution for the big problems are to be smaller
Almost all hives have varroa and are therefore susceptible to the viruses the mite vectors.