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What is Scientific Beekeeping?

Not just the “how,” but the “why”

Scientific beekeeping is not about test tubes and lab coats, but rather about helping you, as a beekeeper, to make management decisions based upon knowledge and understanding of the biology and behavior of this fascinating superorganism we call the honey bee colony. The scientific beekeeper doesn’t want to just be told how to do it, but to understand the reasons why

Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.  Carl Sagan

 

There’s nothing new about this concept; read this editorial from 1923:

Because of the nature of their occupation, every beekeeper must be a scientist if they want be successful, whether they like it or not.  And every real beekeeper is a scientist, although they may not know it. They are continually putting questions to Nature and demanding an answer. Their work leads them into the fields of botany, physics, chemistry, physiology, animal behavior and even geology; and the deeper they explore in such fields the better a beekeeper they become, but best of all, the more happiness they find in life. (Adapted from Gleanings in Bee Culture).

A frustration to me is that many beekeeping recommendations and explanations are based upon suppositions, conjecture, unsubstantiated assumptions, single observations, parroting what “someone once said,” or tradition.  They are frequently surmised from erroneously anthropomorphizing that honey bees perceive or react to the world as humans do.  Or concluding that “it just makes sense,” without fully understanding the biological or physical factors involved.  A scientific beekeeper questions every recommendation, and asks for supportive evidence (biological, physical, and chemical facts, hard data, successful practical experience, and the results of controlled field experiments).

Enter The Internet

We are currently awash in an overload of information updates and advice telling us how to keep bees (much of it conflicting).  The problem is that a lot of beekeeping advice is based upon it being clickbait, or the Dunning – Kruger Effect (lack of experience leading to inflated self-assessment of one’s knowledge).  Everyone wants to catch your attention with something new, but…

There’s little new about beekeeping

If you want new ideas, read old books. Shane Parrish

 

We often ignore the fact that although we have more information at hand, humans aren’t getting any smarter.  As I read the works of beekeepers published in the late 1800s, I realize that brilliant minds at that time had already figured out most of what we need to know about the practice of beekeeping.  But any experienced and informed beekeeper is fully aware of the immense extent of not only their own ignorance, but of how much we still don’t fully understand about bees.  As new scientific findings come to light, we can revise our interpretations (and I happily update my articles).

Providing the information needed to make your own management decisions

Honey bees are fascinating creatures, and beekeeping can be a spiritual experience.  My intention is to provide you with the knowledge background and supportive facts and evidence to help you understand “your” bees, and for making your own informed management decisions.

Keep in mind that if beekeeping were easy, it wouldn’t be so interesting.

Happy beekeeping!

Randy