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Date: | Thu, 13 Jan 2005 11:41:54 EST |
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Why does it have to be a choice between the work of professional bee
scientists and that of amateurs? Surely that's an unjustifiable polarisation; can
they not find a way to work together? I see no reason why the work of a
beekeeper can't be just as valuable as that of a scientist, and vice versa. No
scientist can spread their experimental hives over an entire continent, so their
results are as likely to be affected by local factors as anyone else's. That
can, of course, be overcome by a community of scientists working together; at
the moment we have work on fungi as potential varroa treatments being done
both in the UK and in the States, for instance. Amateurs, too, if I can use
such a term when some may well be professional beekeepers, can work together.
The original scientists, after all, were amateurs with enough money to have the
leisure and the education to do it, and there are still areas where amateurs
make valuable contributions. I see no reason why beekeeping shouldn't be
another.
Regards,
Robert Brenchley
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