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Date: | Thu, 6 Jun 2013 13:27:36 +0800 |
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Christina said:-
> What I want to understand is why some beekeepers are saying their
> bees are hard hit or not thriving on certain crops/locations, while
> others say life is good with neonics and we usually hear about the
> great situation on Canadian canola. Since I understand the mechanism
> of action, more-or-less, I am trying to figure out what could account
> for all these observations
and Allen added:-
>That about sums it up for me and many of us.
>Nicely said.
Thats the exact same situation I see here in 'The land downunder'.
Some say there is no bee problem in Australia....don't believe it! It just depends
on who you talk to.
About 7 mins into the Dan Rather report
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJ5riRX1_3w&feature=youtu.be
a woman is showing her grandchildren some photos of bees on a truck, or rather hanging off it.
Thats how it used to be here for me too , but is no longer....unfortunately.
Like everyone else I don't have any evidence to categorically nail agrichems as the cause of
the problem, but I don't feel its my duty to do that. Its for the agrichem companies to prove that they aren't.
As far as I am concerned, so far they haven't.
PeterD
In Western Australia, a long way from conventional agriculture...... but alongside a river that drains from there.
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