- Associated Press - Saturday, May 4, 2019

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - The beehive is making a comeback.

And we’re not talking hairstyles. We’re talking real honeybees.

Experts have sounded the alarm in recent years about a dramatic decline in the nation’s bee population - and Broward County has heard the cry.

Towns from Davie to Deerfield Beach are setting up micro apiaries on public land, doing their part to help save the world’s top pollinator. Plans are also under way to eventually take the beekeeping mission to Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties, says John Coldwell, president of The Urban Beekeepers and one of the guys behind the trend.

The county’s first public bee yard opened three years ago in Oakland Park. That number has since grown to five, with a sixth on the way in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea.

You can check out all of those busy bees by peering through the observation windows at one of these public bee yards:

- Deerfield Beach’s apiary sits near its Central City Campus at 401 SW Fourth St. All of the bee action happens south of the main building and west of the gate.

- Davie’s apiary opened near the Royal Poinciana Shelter at Tree Tops Park, 3900 SW 100th Ave.

- Coral Springs has one at Dr. Steven Paul Dog Park at 2915 Sportsplex Drive, behind the community garden.

- Oakland Park’s bee yard is near Jaco Pastorius Park at the Urban Farming Institute, 1101 NE 40th Court.

- And the county opened one in Coconut Creek at Tradewinds Park, 3600 West Sample Road, just west of the kiddie train station near the horse pastures.

For a closer look, you can request a tour from Coldwell. While he goes in and interacts with the bees, you’ll be watching from the outside.

___

Battle of the Queens

You’ll learn it’s not easy being a honeybee. The world outside the hive holds its own dangers, but the one inside can be just as harsh.

“If something is wrong with a bee, it’s not pretty,” Coldwell said. “If you’re not producing, they throw you out on the ground. And then you die.”

Pests and mites can also hurt the hive, a bustling and complicated vortex of activity that can fascinate even non-geeks, Coldwell says.

“There’s the drones, the worker bees and the queen,” he said. “The workers are all girls and represent 99 percent of the hive. The drones mate (with the queen). Once they’re done mating, they kick them out of the hive and they die within hours. I call the drones the Nascar couch potato Budweiser guys.”

A weak queen bee makes the hive edgy.

“If she’s not laying eggs fast enough, they will make a new queen,” Coldwell said. “And when a new queen is born, they will throw her out on her ass.”

Sometimes the colony will make two queens.

“If they hatch out at the same time, they fight it out to the death,” Coldwell said. “The winner takes all and runs the hive. If one hatches before the other, she’ll kill the other queen cells before they hatch.”

Now, partially thanks to Coldwell, that fascinating “Game of Thrones-esque” plot is taking place on government-owned land, of all places.

These public bee yards help spread the word about why these complex creatures deserve saving.

“They help teach folks about the life of a bee and how an apiary operates,” Coldwell said. “We’re educating youth and adults about the importance of bees. Imagine if honeybees weren’t around. Up to 40 percent of the food on the table is completely dependent on honeybees.”

Deerfield Beach got its apiary in June 2018 after one of the city commissioners attended the opening of the apiary at Tradewinds Park.

“A lot of our bee populations are dying off in the U.S. right now and we want to provide a safe place for bee rescues,” said Hillary Silverstone, program manager for Deerfield’s bee apiary.

“We started out with three hives,” she said. “We have five now.”

Each hive is home to at least 30,000 bees.

___

A Path to Zen

On Thursday, Coldwell said hello to all 150,000 buzzing bees, walking into the apiary without the white jumpsuit most beekeepers wear when doing their thing.

The protective suit makes him uncomfortable and the bees can sense that, he said in explanation.

“They do smell stress and they will react to it,” Coldwell said. “If I had a bad day at work, my bees will sense that. Before I go see my bees, I take a shower so I can go to my hive fresh as a daisy.”

For Coldwell, beekeeping is a passion.

“If I take you into a beehive and show you the microlife of a bee, I will turn you into a beekeeper,” he said. “It’s the most ethereal zen thing you can do.”

Coldwell and wife Teresa have been tending beehives for the past eight years, getting their start in their own backyard in Fort Lauderdale.

They love their bees and their bees love them.

“Bees know me by smell and they know me by vision,” Coldwell said. “Your bees do get to know you. The more they work with you the more comfortable they get with you.”

___

Backyard Beekeepers

Bees, whose decline in numbers is partly due to pesticides, help pollinate 90 percent of the globe’s flowering plants and about one-third of the food we eat, experts say.

Those facts hit home with Lauderdale-by-the-Sea Commissioner Edmund Malkoon, who got the idea to bring a public apiary to his city after touring one in Oakland Park.

It will cost $7,500 to build and open in early May.

One well-managed hive can produce 40 pounds of honey a year.

But like public apiaries in other cities, this one’s primary purpose won’t be to harvest honey, but to help save bees, Malkoon said.

“It’s not intended to be a moneymaker,” he said. “It’s mainly ecological and trying to create these environments where (bees) can thrive.”

___

Growing Trend

Coldwell says he’s hoping the public apiaries will get more people interested in bees and urban beekeeping.

Statewide, there are 5,000 registered beekeepers managing 500,000 hives, according to state records.

Florida requires beekeepers to register their apiaries with the state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

In Miami-Dade, 202 registered beekeepers manage 14,268 hives. And in Palm Beach County, 235 beekeepers manage 43,002 hives.

The numbers are much lower in Broward, where 180 beekeepers manage 3,269 hives.

“Broward doesn’t have any place to put bees,” Coldwell said.

And that’s why finding government land makes perfect sense, he said.

Three more public apiaries are in the works in Parkland, Pompano Beach and Plantation, Coldwell said. And he’s also scouting for spots in Hollywood and Fort Lauderdale.

To request a tour, contact John Coldwell through The Urban Beekeepers website at https://theurbanbeekeepers.com/.

___

Information from: Sun Sentinel , http://www.sun-sentinel.com/

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide