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Part 2 of 2 Beekeeper Michael Bush Interview- Natural Beekeeping- Hyve Time EP004B

Part 2 of 2 Beekeeper Michael Bush Interview- Natural Beekeeping- Hyve Time EP004B

FromBeekeeping Podcast Hyve Time™: Bee expert interviews and beekeeping news, tips, & discussions.


Part 2 of 2 Beekeeper Michael Bush Interview- Natural Beekeeping- Hyve Time EP004B

FromBeekeeping Podcast Hyve Time™: Bee expert interviews and beekeeping news, tips, & discussions.

ratings:
Length:
43 minutes
Released:
Mar 29, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

This week I am joined by Michael Bush, a beekeeper, speaker, and author of "The Practical Beekeeper, Beekeeping Naturally". This is a 2 part podcast episode where we discuss bees, comb design, natural beekeeping, studies, the experience Michael has in beekeeping, and the knowledge around how we as beekeepers can and should get off the chemical treatment "train".
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From BushFarms.com
Beekeeping House of Cards
So beekeepers, with the advice and assistance of the USDA and the universities, have built this precarious system of beekeeping that relies on chemicals, antibiotics, and pesticides to keep it going. And beekeepers keep breeding the resistant pests that can survive the treatments, contaminating the entire wax supply with poisons (and we make our foundation out of that contaminated wax so it is a closed system) and breeding queens that can't survive without all of this treatment.
What can we do to have a sustainable beekeeping system?
Stop treating
The only way to have a sustainable system of beekeeping is to stop treating. Treating is a death spiral that is now collapsing. To leverage this, you need to raise your queens from local surviving bees. Only then can you get bees who genetically can survive and parasites that are in tune with their host. As long as we treat we get weaker bees who can only survive if we treat, and stronger parasites who can only survive if they breed fast enough to keep up with our treatments. No stable relationship can develop until we stop treating.
The other problem, of course, is that if we just stop now with the system of beekeeping we have, the genetically and environmentally weakened bees will usually die. Even if they are genetically capable of surviving in a clean (uncontaminated) environment, we have to get to an environment they can survive in or they will still die. So what is that environment?
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Show Notes:
Hyperthermia Treatment Study1
Hyperthermia Treatment Study2
Hive Type Study1
Hive Type Study2
Bush Farms
Michael Bush's Books

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Released:
Mar 29, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (18)

Each episode we talk business in, about, and around the beekeeping world and discuss with other business owners not in the beekeeping world, and how some of the lessons and skills they have learned can translate over to beekeeping. We also drill down on the evolution of beekeeping today as well how tech and other businesses are helping pave the way for the future of beekeeping and the science that goes into this evolution. Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hyve-time/support