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Even those that went bankrupt? Applies both in business (as certain US
presidential candidate reminds us, despite 4 bankruptcies) as well as in
beekeeping, where multitudes follow the "experienced" beekeepers yet are
never, or rarely, able to overwinter their colonies successfully.
The sweet spot is somewhere between pure theory and practice and everyone
has to figure it out for themselves, but painting with broad brush strokes
leads us into orthodoxies.
As a hobbyist, one of the most eye-opening lessons of Prof.Bromenschenk's
classes were films from the commercial operations. It makes one appreciate
how long the chain is and how much work goes on before that queen cage, or
a 3 pound package of live bees arrives at one's doorstep, or that jar of
honey ends up on a big store's shelf.
Przemek
On Sun, 27 Mar 2016 11:11:54 -0400, Bill T <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> [...]
> I also learned to only listen to those Professors who actually ran a
> business and disregard all who had not. [...]
>
> Same with beekeeping (see, I did keep on topic).
--
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