We are very sad to hear of the passing of Peter Tomkins, aged 87. Peter worked at Rothamsted and was a font of beekeeping knowledge and great stories. His family tell us that he did get to see the April issue of Bee Craft and was 'chuffed' to have won the prize letter.
Really sad to hear the news of the passing of Dinah Sweet from @CardiffBees.
Dinah was a wealth of beekeeping knowledge and a valued visitor to our local association for honey shows and talks. She was also a regular writer in magazines such as Welsh Beekeeper & @BeeCraftMag
We're very sad to hear that the 2020 IMYB in Slovenia has been postponed until 2021. There will be lots of disappointed young beekeepers out there, but a very understandable decision, taken in good time. https://t.co/qzg9EtX8Dr
In a study published Tuesday scientists found that baby #bees can feel the effects of the food contaminated by pesticides, making them poorer at performing tasks later in life. #beekeeping https://t.co/sJQONZe6BG
It is prohibited to cut hedgerows or to burn gorse from 1st March until 31st August. Report illegal hedge cutting to the National Parks & Wildlife Service
(https://t.co/Ftd2ecOrzB) and/or the Gardaí. Give as much info possible – photos, vehicle registration, date, time & location
IBRA’s the 1st prize (a 1 year subscription to Bee World) to the best student entry (on #propolis' effect on pain) at the #AAAPhilippines Conference 2020 . The conference was mostly about #stinglessbees – which rapidly seem to acquire the status of being the ‘bees of the future’.
Wild plants and animals and their interactions with their ecosystems have sustained humankind for millennia, providing the air we breathe, the food we eat and the material and energy for our economies and well-being
🐝https://t.co/R6TFfHHeXR
#WorldWildlifeDay#WWD2020
Here's a Friday afternoon treat: our February double-page spread of the Beekeeper's Timetable as originally devised by Glyn Davies of Devon and re-presented by Bee Craft. Click for a higher-res version: https://t.co/RFTNZFYdEj
In 1996 it was discovered bees have tiny, tornado-like airflows that form on the front edges of their wings, known as leading edge vortices (LEVs). This allow them to angle their wings more sharply toward the sky, improving the flow of air and helping them rise.
#WeLoveBees
Now that's a name that would have gone down well in our #HiveMind column in Bee Craft this month. (And did you see Harry Siviter's great article on #sulfoxaflor in the January issue?)
This is interesting
'Defra said the money would also be used to help “continue and improve our tree health offer ensuring that the nation’s trees are increasingly resilient and healthy”.'
https://t.co/7hNG8MCSGH