Episodes
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Season 2 Episode 2: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Bumble Bees 101 with Mathias Fenton
We welcome biology instructor Mathias Fenton of Mount Royal University. He tells us about big bumbling bumble bees. Our chat touches on the relationship between wasps, ants, honey bees and bumble bees. Mathias mentions some of his interesting wild bee observations and we give a shoutout to iNaturalist, a great public resource that all naturalists, regardless their experience level, can appreciate and enjoy.
In this episode, we focus on the bumble bee lifecycle and best places to position empty nest boxes. In the spring, these cool-weather insects start a nest with just a single queen. She mated the previous fall, then waited under snowdrifts for the new season. Then she begins with a search for a suitable nesting site. Mathias explains how the Alberta Native Bee Council surveyed the nesting success of 400 empty wooden boxes placed in back yards by citizen-scientists. Success varied statistically depending on how far above ground the empty boxes were placed, direction of box entrances, colour of paint, and amount of sunlight hitting the bees' wooden homes. Anyone hoping to attract bumble bee pollinators by setting up backyard boxes will find Mathias Fenton's results interesting and helpful.
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Bumble bee box assembly instructions can be found on this page.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Season 2 Episode 1: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Chief Crowchild and the Bees
Chief Lee Crowchild of Tsuut'ina Nation is a member of a family designated as the Keepers of the Bees. He tells us of childhood summers spent sleeping in a tent that carried the symbol of the bee. But it was not until later in life that he tasted honey from a hive behind his house when he realized how deeply bees were embedded in his life.
In this episode, we learn a bit about the culture of the Tsuut'ina people and the Chief's honey bee apiary that helped build respect for the bees and skills, knowledge, and self-esteem for people at Tsuut'ina. You will also hear about a bee-welcoming smudge ceremony that still fills Ron with wonder.
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Episodes manquant?
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Season 2 Trailer: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Season 2
Season 2 of About Bees opens today! We look ahead at the next 12 episodes that has guests talking about 300-pound honey crops, helping bumble bees find a home, controlling granulation, beekeeping at Tsuu'tina Nation with Chief Crowchild, raising queen cells on Canada's westcoast, amazing BeeCube technology, and, of course Plato.
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 12: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Bees by the Number
In this episode, we manage to jump around the bee world by using the numbers 1, 2, 2-3, 26, 500, 20,000, 45,000, and 50,000. Thatâs a wealthy range of handsome numbers!
One queen? Not always. What about zero queens plus laying workers? Or more than one queen? Did you know that some beekeepers quit running two-queen colonies because their hives made so much honey that they became impractical to add supers on top? We're talking 600 pounds per hive.
Two words. Please folks, it is honey bee, not honeybee. Two words. Beehive, one word. Bee yard, two words. We explore why itâs important to use words correctly, including ârobbingâ the bees and all the baggage that the word ârobbingâ carries. Then we naturally start talking about witches.
Why 2-3 and the numbers 26 and 500? And why those big numbers â 20,000, 45,000 and 50,000? Youâll have to listen to find out what those are about. Curious? Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 11: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Moving Bees 2
We begin this podcast with the capture of a swarm, with details described in real time. The subject of Hutterites, a Christian religious group, came up when similarities between Hutterite colonies and bee colonies 'splitting' was discussed.
Since we are again talking about moving hives of bees this episode, Ron has a neat trick to help you pick up a single-storey colony (such as a swarm) and move it inside the trunk of a car or back of a van. Simple, fast, cheap, and the bees donât get out and get lost.
Later in the episode, Ron describes a couple of harrowing bee-moving incidents that involved truck malfunctions â brake failure on a steep mountain road and then an accelerator jamming on a busy toll road. Luckily, no one was hurt.
We talk about the Tesla truck, which probably wouldnât be much good for hauling bees, then Elon Musk, Twitter, and the future of the planet.
We wrap up with an inside look at a large-scale commercial honey farm, Scandia Honey, and talk shop about the operation of 15,000 colonies of bees on the western Canadian prairies. So, let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We thrive on your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 10: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Moving Bees, part 1
Part 1 of Moving Honey Bees. We look at the ways beekeepers have carted their hives on the backs of humans, donkeys, horse-drawn wagons, boats, flat-bed trucks, semi-rigs, and aircraft.
We donât neglect to acknowledge the inventors of the palletized migratory beekeeping system, the native bees who became displaced refugees, California almond growers, and a very special shoutout the President Eisenhower who promoted the amazing highway systems just so American beekeepers donât get caught at a red light in Mayberry, North Carolina.
It's a wide highway, so let's roll!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 9: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Honey Harvest Time
After a few minutes pondering how some carpenter ants in Florida choose the profession of surgeon (sawing off sick comrades wounded legs), Bidzina and Ron settle into a honey harvest discussion.
This episode is packed with ideas and suggestions that describe four legal ways to harvest honey and one illegal way. Then it wraps up with talk about amazingly big crops and the three disastrous ones that helped persuade Ron to move on to a new life. It's a wild ride, so let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 8: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast - Dogs That Smell
We talk with Rose-Anne Bouffard, a bee enthusiast who trains dogs to find and rescue wayward bumblebee nests and to locate colonies with American Foulbrood (AFB).
Dog breeds and their amazing scent sensitivity are discussed. Bloodhounds are best for sniffing out bumblebee nests and honeybee diseases, but that's not what Rose uses. Humans have million scent receptors and can smell AFB, but dogs have thirty million receptors. Dogs also use their floppy ears to stir up scents. The bee-rescuing dogs were trained through find-reward-repeat sessions. We discuss training a tracking dog to find AFB and the huge economic value that brings.
Talking about stings, Rose finds that controlling her breath and going into a meditative state when working around bees is essential. Without the proper mindset, apparently Preparation H helps with the bee stings you will get.
The questions of bee consciousness and a bees' ability to sense pain come up. We agree that bees probably feel pain.
Finally, there is a big shout out to Alberta Native Bee Council, the Suzuki Butterflyway Project, iNaturalist, and the urgency for action. Rose's bee and dog projects are looking for collaborators so check out her website to learn how to get involved!
Rose's website address for Dogs Find Bees is https://dogsfindbees.com/ Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 7: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Cameroon to Canada - Patrick's Bee Journey
In this episode of About Bees, we are joined by Patrick Tefouet Tonlio, who was an agriculture community organizer and teacher in the African nation of Cameroon. Patrick now lives in Calgary where he keeps honey bees and has been working on farm and bee projects with the Calgary Catholic Immigration Societyâs Land of Dreams (https://ccisab.ca/land-of-dreams/).
During his last year of high school, Patrick learned to work with bees from his grandfather when Patrick moved from the capital city to live in his grandfatherâs village. Honey bees in Cameroon are extremely defensive, so most traditional beekeeping consists of making small bamboo hives, coating the boxes with propolis and wax as a lure, then putting the empty hives in trees about 3 metres (ten feet) above ground level. After wild bees occupy the boxes and after the nectar season, honey is harvested.Cameroon has commercial beekeepers, including the Fabasso family, friends of Patrick, who operate 15,000 hives. Mr. Fabasso has designed a hive, also made of bamboo, similar to Langstroth hives. The Fabasso honey crop is squeezed by a press invented by the Fabasso family (https://teca.apps.fao.org/en/technologies/10140/). Pressing the honey yields a high-quality honey that doesnât need to be extracted and is never heated during processing.
Beekeepers may harvest about 20 kilograms (45 pounds) of honey each year from traditional hives. But the ethnic group sometimes known as Pygmy people (Baka) harvest directly from wild hives. To reduce stings, they use a special secret herb, rubbed on their skin. The herb? Itâs a secret. Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your questions, comments, and angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 6: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast - Sweet Clover: Americaâs other weed
Legal. Illegal. Legal. Illegal again. Sweet clover has quite a history. Introduced into North America from Europe about 300 years ago, farmers were once fined for having it in their fields. It can be used to feed cattle, but improperly stored, it can become a blood thinner and kill cows. On the other hand, the state of Kentucky was saved from bankruptcy by sweet clover. And so were some beekeepers.
Every acre of sweet clover yields as much as one-thousand pounds of honey from its nectar. Along with alfalfa and a few other choice nectar-producers, itâs a winner in the nectar sweepstakes. But this podcast also looks at an Australian beekeeper who found an even better plant. But we circle back to sweet clover and Bidzina reads a list of âTen surprising facts about sweet clover.â Number eight is amazing.
Mostly we discuss sweet clover, but bees, horned toads and tobacco are mentioned. Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 5: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â Some Bee Buzz
In this episode, we jump from moving bees from Alberta to British Columbia to examining a recent paper about the ecology of disappearing bee species. Then, of course, we chat about Beyonce and Hex Art.
Bidzina describes conditions in British Columbia and why he avoided going farther into the mountains to make fireweed honey but instead split his colonies, doubling their number. He tells us a little about moving his bees back to Alberta, driving through the night with a trailer through the Rocky Mountains. In Alberta, he loses most of those hives over the next winter. But two survivor colonies are resilient and develop into strong colonies.
We discuss removing honey by letting the supers stay in the apiary, separated from the hives, allowing the bees to drift out of the honey supers and back to their homes, abandoning the honey. Bidzina also mentions nuisance bees at a wedding held where he was extracting.
Then, Ron talks about his two backyard hives. Both were replacements for colonies that died over winter. One was a package, the other a nuc. It was surprising to see that there was very little difference in strength between them by mid-July.
We drift to talking about trains and the enormous size of Canada. It's a 7,500-kilometre road trip from Pacific to Atlantic. Maybe it should be tackled by train, not car or plane. Trains are good.
We explore a recent paper about land use changes (farming, urbanization) that are related to declining populations of native and imported bees. Across a huge temperate area, scientists broadly divided landscapes into forested, herbaceous, agricultural, and urban. One of those areas were better for bee health and survival. The results surprised me a little. See: âLand use changes associated with declining honey bee health across temperate North Americaâ https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/acd867
Other news bits include the collapse of insect species diversity, which leads us to wonder about the 2024 reversal of a ban on neonicotinoids in England and the implications for bee survival. Then we lighten up with a visit to Beyonce (the Queen Bey) and a glance at a paper on the prevalence of bees throughout the history of art - have you noticed that hexagons seem to be everywhere we look these day? Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 4: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast â The Beesâ Ears
In this episode, we discover that insects, including bees, can hear. They have three ways of picking up sound â through their antennae, their feet, and through their armour (exoskeleton). Since bees can hear, does music calm the bees and reduce stings? And since bees can hear, does the old tradition of âTelling the Beesâ make sense? Is that why, upon Queen Elizabethâs death, the royal bees were told about her passing by the royal beekeeper? Why?
How do bees buzz? Do they hear their own buzzing? Is the tone of a happy hive (261 Hz, middle C on a piano) the basis for all western music? If bees arenât dancing at a party, do they feel left out and get sad? Is it wrong for us to attribute human thoughts and emotions to bees? Should there be bee insect sanctuaries? Where? How would that work? When Asian honey bees do their flash dance, is it noisy?
Finally, why donât honey bees pollinate tomatoes? They canât, but bumble bees can. Itâs got everything to do with insect size, weight, and something called buzz pollination. Listen to this episode as we compare their buzzing skills. Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcast
Finally: email your angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 3: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast - Do Bees Feel Pain?
We often expect to be on the receiving end of pain - whether from a broken elbow or from the tail-end of a bee. But what about bees? Do small creatures feel pain? Is it just a matter of defining pain in a way that we can claim bees feel no pain - or that they do, indeed feel pain? Or is the sensation of feeling pain so complicated that it defies a definition? Do bees simply react without actually 'feeling' anything? Or are they as anguished as humans when they suffer injuries?
We explore this question with McGill neuroscience student Daniel Miksha so we can better understand this issue and so we can begin to recognize our potential responsibilities respecting the ethical treatment of bees. Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 2: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast - Tolstoy and the Robber Bees
Leo Tolstoy was a beekeeping fanatic. He even managed to work his bees into Anna Karenina, as well as War and Peace. In this episode of About Bees, Culture & Curiosity, we take a shallow dive into deep Russian literature, and look at the conflicted life and death of Tolstoy. Our main focus is the passage from War And Peace after Napoleon enters Moscow and finds, according to Tolstoy, a city defeated and empty. Defeated and empty in the way that a robbed colony of bees is defeated and empty.
We also take a look at what goes on in a typical modern apiary when robbing between hives gets out of hand. Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your angst: [email protected]
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Season 1 Episode 1: About Bees, Culture & Curiosity Podcast - Myths and Legends
What we think we know might not be true.
Did you know that Einstein once warned us that without bees, humans would go extinct in four years? Did you know that honey bees are going extinct? That archeologists found 3000-year-old honey that was as good as new? That you can survive on a diet of nothing but honey? That when bees smell smoke, they get ready to fly away from their hive? Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong and wrong again. In this episode, we look at myths and legends about honey bees.
The beekeeping world is flooded with misinformation. It's almost impossible to turn back that tide. But let's try. Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your angst: [email protected]
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The About Bees, Culture & Curiosity podcast explores the world of bees (and their entomological cousins) with ample attention to culture and the curiosities of the entire insect world.
Bidzina Mosiashvili is a young beekeeper facing the challenges of managing a few colonies and growing a business of bees. He brings fresh, thoughtful insights and questions to our podcast while Ron Miksha is phasing out of bees and life. Ron learned beekeeping during the 1960s. As a boomer, he is stuck with some old ideas, but has had a lot of years on the road.
This episode introduces your hosts with details of their murky past and fuzzy future. Let's go!
Please subscribe, like, love, and follow. We live or die by your adulation.
Podcast website: https://sites.libsyn.com/540327/site
About Ron Miksha: https://about-bees.org/about-ron/
Watch the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@ABCCPodcastFinally: email your angst: [email protected]
Thanks - and keep on beeing in whatever way gives you meaning.