Doug - thank you for your response to my posting over the weekend. I guess it shows that I haven't spent as much time as I need to educating myself about Africanized bees. When I said that we (beekeepers) need to educate the public about African bees, I really should have mentioned that first, we need to educate ourselves!! Thank you also for widening my focus - I really had been thinking about African Bees from the rather selfish point of view of "how will they affect my apiaries, and my hobby", rather than taking the larger (and more important) view of how they impact the general public - the accidental agitation of a feral Africanized colony being an exellent example. Another item to throw into the fray - has anyone thought very hard about how the migratory beekeeping industry will impact the movement of Africanized Bees in the USA?? I think that the massive movement of bees that results from this industry is rather unique to the U.S., and I wonder how it will affect us. I've heard that the rapid spread of Tracheal and Varroa mites in the US has been attributed (at least in part) to this unique feature of American beekeeping. ------------------------------------------------- RIck Hough Hamilton, MA, USA (just NE of Boston) Internet: [log in to unmask]