James Fischer <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>So, 3000 years ago, beekeepers were moving their hives
>to specific crops for a specific bloom of a cover crop
>overtly planted by a grower.
This is an assumption on your part. There is nothing in your quoted
material that should lead one to conclude that the Egyptian beekeepers
were moving their hives to cover a specific crop.
>This was not mere seasonal movement, this was a hive
>placement so specific that they had to move their hives
>to avoid the collateral damage
I will say that you are in extreme error here.
This WAS seasonal movement of hives.
And I will provide supporting evidence.
The bees were NOT in the farmland to cover specific blooms, and the
donkeys were NOT needed to transport bees to cover a specific bloom
either. Evidence shows that a seasonal movement of honeybee colonies in
Ancient Egypt was required for the purpose of escaping the Nile flooding
which came every year from June to September, caused by the heavy summer
rains in the Ethiopian highlands. So this makes the movement of hives in
Ancient Egypt seasonal OR ‘transhumance beekeeping’.
You write:
“The growers
>were waiting impatiently for the beekeepers to move their
>hives, as the growers wanted to burn the weeds and brush
>and then flood the fields.”
You provide an erroneous statement.
Farmers in Ancient Egypt did not ‘purposely flood fields‘, evidence shows
they had NO control over this. The Nile, or as the Egyptians believed the
God Hapi, was in total control, and they had to get around on boats for
much of the time during the flooding. Each year, farmers would burn the
fields prior to the flooding season. To water their crops they had to
have a canal connected to a river, and to lift the water from the canal
you would have a shaduf (a shaduf is a large pole balanced on a
crossbeam, a rope and bucket on one end and a heavy counter weight at the
other). Again, flooding was NOT 'controled' by farmers.
If they were burning the fields, would this not suggest that the growing
season as well past? and the beekeepers, if they were migratory should
have had their hives long since ‘migrated’ to the next specific bloom,
perhaps a month prior? Evidence suggests, they were basically stationary
beekeepers with seasonal movement of hives in and out of the low lying
cropland to escape the Nile flooding.
Intentional flooding of fields by farmers in Ancient Egypt; debunked.
The theory that the movement of hives by the Ancient Egyptians is not
seasonal OR ‘transhumance beekeeping’ ; also debunked.
Best Wishes,
Joe
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