By Michael Carmichael
October 2, 2008
But Hasselman is not a “hobby farmer” who simply gathers honey from his hives and processes it for Saturday sale. He’s one of a large number of Michigan beekeepers who work at the business of bees full time. Although with Hasselman the goal is strictly honey, many Michigan beekeepers put their little charges to work doing what bees do best - pollinating Michigan’s vegetables, flowers and fruits.
Blueberries are typical of what bees pollinate
Michigan, according to retired Michigan State University professor and entomologist Dr. Roger Hoopingarner, is the country’s largest producer of highbush blueberries, with about 18,000 acres under cultivation. Most of that production comes from five Western Michigan counties: Van Buren, Ottawa, Allegan, Berrien and Muskegon. The predominately sandy soil and high water table in that part of the state contribute to bushes that produce as many as 2,000 to 3,000 blossoms per bush. At a planting density of 870 bushes per acre, that’s 1.75 to 2.6 million flowers. All those blossoms require a tremendous number of bees.
“Blueberry blossoms are really designed for bumble bees,” explains Hasselman. “There are a lot of situations like that, where the plant, flower and type of bee have evolved over thousands of years,” he continues. “On the other hand, honey bees are adaptable and just have to work harder to vibrate the blossom so that the pollen will shake off the flower and onto them.”
He continues: “Bees are drawn to flowers with a high sugar content. That’s why it’s sometimes difficult for the ‘rent-a-bee’ guys to get their hives to pollinate apple trees. Apple trees usually bloom when dandelions do and the dandelions have a naturally higher sugar content than the apple trees - so enough extra hives have to be brought in to make sure that there are too many bees for the dandelions and the excess bees have to settle for pollinating the apple trees as a second choice.”
Hasselman is asked if these apple tree pollinating bees are the source for apple blossom honey. “No,” he says, “varietal honey - the kind that specifies the predominant flower it came from - must be at least 80 percent from that flower. Agricultural inspectors examine the pollen grains on selected bees and if there aren’t enough to meet that standard the producer can be fined or even jailed for false labeling. Most of us Michigan honey producers don’t have the enormous supply of a single flower source needed to supply varietal honey. Instead, we talk more about ‘early spring’ honey or ‘wildflower’ honey - or my preference ‘pure honey made in Michigan by Michigan Bees.'”
“The feral bees used to do more than half of the pollinating of Michigan crops for free,” according to MSU’s Hoopingarner. Partially, he continues, it’s “due to changes in our own blueberry production practices which remove bee forage and suitable habitat.” Additionally, about 20 years ago different types of mites started invading the feral colonies and killing them off.
Disappearing bees
The mites are a continuing challenge for both types of beekeepers. So are viruses and certain types of beetles. Last year a new danger arose as thousands of bee colonies just disappeared. Bees would fly off in the morning and never return. Called Colony Collapse Disorder or CCD, the cause is still undecided, though there was less evidence of it in Michigan than had initially been reported.
A growing body of evidence, however, points to a common pesticide used in agriculture that was thought to be safe for honey and other bees. A pesticide called Merit, according to a column in the Detroit News by self-proclaimed “Yardener” Jeff Ball, “is a very common insecticide in agriculture because it is systemic and very effective in controlling tough to kill insects such as aphids. Many apple orchards are routinely sprayed with Merit early in the season and then when the honey bees come in to pollinate those trees, they disappear. Now we know that any plant that is treated with Merit and has blossoms that attract bees, those bees will receive a non-lethal shot of Merit.” He concludes: “But it will cause them to lose their ability to find their way back to the hive. It also weakens the bee’s immune system so the bee usually dies of some fungus or virus.”
Once a beekeeper, always one
Even with all of the difficulties they encounter beekeepers such as Hasselman say that bees are in their blood.
“When I was a kid I casually mentioned to my parents one year that I thought it would be fun to keep a hive or two of bees. Next thing I knew I started getting presents of things that I couldn’t imagine the use of - until I realized they were beekeeping supplies. The bees arrived in a package in a spring - and were dead by summer because I just didn’t know anything about beekeeping. I spent the next five years as an apprentice to a beekeeper who kept a thousand hives. I remained with beekeeping as a hobby throughout my working life and, after early retirement, I have somewhere between 100 and 150 hives. Each colony produces around 200 pounds of marketable honey,” Hasselman explains. “The rent-a-bee guys make their money taking the bees from field to field pollinating everything from blueberries and apples to cucumbers. All that travel results in actual honey production of only about 65 pounds.”
Bees and business