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Informed Discussion of Beekeeping Issues and Bee Biology

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From:
Lou Daveri <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Informed Discussion of Beekeeping Issues and Bee Biology <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 18 Mar 2012 19:34:25 +1030
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Andrew: Good on you for participating in formal apiary education! The world 
needs more bee-keepers, hobbyists included. Individual States recognise 
this, and in the past decade, education domains have designed very formal 
apiary training, and although some of the aspects seem risible to 'old 
hands', such formal training, wherever it is delivered, has elements of 
consistency, and will also include reference to legislative requirements. 
The previously informal training, from experienced beeks, can be a matter of 
chance, good luck and/or happenstance, as our own experience indicates. 
Assumptive education can be misleading, and common sense is not as innate as 
those of us who think we have it, think it might be. Striking a match 
consistently safely  is such an activity.

Here, in Oz, The federal government has initiated a Vocational Education & 
Training scheme to equip modern Australia with a workforce trained for 
specific industry employment, including apiary. The VET scheme needs 
trainers, so I have been undertaking formal training to be a 'Trainer and 
Assessor', and decided to base part of my  study on designing a 'competency' 
(as they are called) for NESB beekeepers (as is my Dear Husband), and 
thought I'd keep it simple (as I thought it had to be), and use the base 
competency of 'How to Use a Bee-smoker'. Gosh, what a Pandora's Box, but 
that's another story!

Meanwhile, I think it's the nomenclature of your course that is problematic. 
'Master' used to mean a higher tertiary qualification for university 
graduates, or peer-recognised craftsmen (such as DH who, in his life-long 
trade, is a Master Cabinetmaker). I, personally, as a university graduate, 
with an ordinary degree in humanities, have always baulked at being called a 
'Master Treegrower', but that's what the large plaque on our farm front gate 
says. DH and I completed one of these new-fangled courses to help us move 
from the Big Smoke to the bush, and show other sea- and tree-changers that 
planting forests for profit can be done, even by city-slickers such as 
ourselves. 10 years down the track, and all's well in the  sugar-gum forest, 
which is just coming into flower and will provide a much-needed fillip for 
bees starved of traditional Summer florification this year. I still don't 
have an alternative title for the Master Tree Growers course, save to drop 
the word 'Master' all together.

WE have been encouraged and nurtured into apiary by several bee keepers, and 
we will be forever grateful for their input into our apiary education. We 
have assembled an old-fashioned bi-lingual library, have searched and joined 
bi-lingual internet groups, so our knowledge base extends outside our 
geographical parameters, allowing us to pick the eyes out of the advice and 
informal education we have received, and so we are aware of the technical 
limitations of our informal group, and the occasional hiding of knowledge, 
and this became very evident when we were strongly encouraged by our State 
apiary bureaucrats to complete an almost-compulsory Quality Assurance 
course, which the federal government sees as an important step to help all 
Oz beekeepers understand the importance of quality control, in the face of 
invading pests, as readers of Trevor Weathehead's missives on this forum, 
will realise we face.

Confidence can overshadow competence, and as inexperienced beeks as we still 
are, after 7 years at it, I'm pleased to say we knew enough to be able to 
advise suburban friends recently, desperate to 'make' their own honey, that 
there were legislative requirements they needed to follow, and bee-line 
issues of hive height and neighbour safety that had never occurred to them. 
At community markets, where we sell freshly-cut slabs of honeycomb, I am 
always amazed, when we offer tasting samples, direct from a frame, when 
folks comment that they had no idea where honey really comes from, or that 
it could be eaten, wax and all, right off the frame. Ignorance is not always 
bliss. Education can empower - and improve sales!

So, Andrew, as an educator yourself, I hope you complete the Maine Master 
Beekeeper's course, and go on to inspire others. I am sure that there are 
local factors that have been incorporated into your Maine course that may 
not be relevant in another geographical area, but the basics are the basics 
are the basics...., and you will be better-positioned  to critique and tweak 
elements of the course as I have done for NESB learners, where I  have 
re-written some of the competencies in much simpler English to meet to level 
of the learner, while still allowing a NESB student to reach the required 
standard of competency for the unit if learning under study. I'm sure you'll 
find your niche, and in turn, your students may find employment 
opportunities with those same large apiarists in your region, while you 
remain a hobbyist.

LIDA
BBC Apiary, Kangaroo Island,
3548s1374e

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