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Mon, 23 Feb 2009 13:02:28 -0500 |
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2009 12:48:31 -0500, Steve Noble <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>It seems to me there is a difference between the beekeeping model and the
>commercial agriculture model as they pertain to chemical use.
I don't think so. To me pest control is not either organic or chemical; it is a continuum. Everyone
who controls any sort of pest lies somewhere on this continuum at some point. IPM is about
locating on the continuum at the point where costs and safety balance. Necessarily this point
moves about as conditions change. Farmers in general see the benefit of IPM in the use of less
chemicals as it may be cheaper to do without. Overuse of chemicals also reduces their
effectiveness, hence the need to use pest controls tactically rather than as a blanket.
> Two; the chemicals beekeepers use seem to adversely affect mainly themselves, hence the
diminishing returns.
Excuse me, but what about chemicals in the honey? -- not to mention the loss of bees as
pollinators if the beekeepers themselves are actually to blame for CCD as some (not I) have
suggested. Seriously, I want US beekeepers and US farmers to succeed. I already buy plenty of
foreign produce and I enjoy those products. But I DO NOT want to see the day arrive where I
can't get a NY State apple -- or jars of local basswood and buckwheat honey. I want NYS cheese,
sweet corn, etc. NYS red wine isn't there yet, but if we end up getting hot dry summers due to
global warming, it could improve.
pb
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