If you have actual data that conflicts with specific issues in the texts, by all means, bring that up. Christina With all due respect, I did, not the text of the book per sea, that wasn't the point. The text of the post was in question. And so far the choice is to ignore it. Its called ground truth. If your theory that local adaptations were the solution were true, we would have some evidence. Randy's mentioned he seem some evidence. I have bought a lot of those locals... So far, not ready for prime time. I asked for examples...... simple question. Instead I get a lecture on going back to the text book? Tom Glenn spent a lot of time on it, as well as every other bee breeder in the country. In fact pretty close to the world. So far, no Joy. If the theory of Local adaptation had any merits, then we could go into the large tracts of national forest and find bees that are varroa proof and great in boxes. I wish it were so, truly I do. Nothing better in the world than a simple elegant soulution, I still hope I am wrong. It would be cool to find a local adapted bee that made honey and survived without intervention. Wiki book review? Really?? What Blink does is teach you that following the crowd is not always the right answer. ABC of bee culture is a fine book, sits next to me on the couch and I read a lot. And reread... and there are no answers for our current situation mentioned yet. Charles *********************************************** The BEE-L mailing list is powered by L-Soft's renowned LISTSERV(R) list management software. For more information, go to: http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html