Paving the way to natural and economical beekeeping in Jamaica
By Tom Hebert, Farmer-to-Farmer volunteer
A Jamaican couple’s dream of a more sustainable,
natural and economical beekeeping using top bar hives has begun to fruit its
benefits for themselves and many other beekeepers on their Caribbean island
because of Farmer-to-Farmer.
Kwao and Agape Adams had a vision of a more simple and
natural way to keep bees in Jamaica upon their return to the island after
living in Vermont for five years. Kwao had kept some beehives in the United
States in the more common manner of movable-frame Langstroth hives, but they wanted
something different for their farm--Yerba Buena Farm located near Robins Bay,
St. Mary, on the island’s north coast.
Agape and Kwao Adams, with their oldest son Emmanuel, inspecting a top
bar hive on their north coast Jamaican farm.
Their reading and research showed them top bar hives
offered the alternative they were looking for—an alternative that could also
benefit the other beekeepers in this tropical country.
The Jamaican beekeeping industry has not been
sustainable for smaller scale beekeepers, Agape Adams explained. It is a system
using a type of hive where most beekeepers cannot afford the equipment to
expand, cannot get the wax necessary for foundation sheets, and are unable to
buy the other equipment designed for the Langstroth system. They also do not
have solutions for dealing with the pest and disease problems that are
occurring in these hives because of increasing resistance to the commonly used
chemical treatments.
The
Adam’s problem was the lack of knowledge and experience with how the top bar
hive beekeeping system worked and with ways to keep bees in a more natural and
healthier manner. This is where Farmer-to-Farmer’s flex program came into play,
sending the first volunteer for this project in July 2012.
Beekeeper
Tom Hebert, originally from Wisconsin and a former Peace Corps Volunteer who
has been living in Honduras for more than 20 years, gave them their first
introduction to top bar hives. Hebert is now back in Jamaica for his third
mission during this month, having also spent the month of July 2013 helping to expand
and continue the project.
Tom Hebert
inspects a comb from a top bar hive during one of the training sessions.
The
activities taught to these Caribbean beekeepers through the Farmer-to-Farmer
program have included among other things the construction of top bar hives and
their management, improving bee hives through selective queen breeding and
requeening, and natural methods of keeping bee colonies healthy. Other
activities have been the construction of simple pollen traps adapted to these
hives, candle making, and building inexpensive cement molds for making wax
foundation. Eight volunteers have come on 11 training missions. 1,440 people
have attended the trainings.
Kwao
and Agape Adams, who coordinate the project, now have a 60-hive apiary because
of Farmer-to-Farmer’s technical help. In addition to benefiting their family it
is also a model apiary for training. They frequently have other beekeepers and
groups visit their farm, wanting to know how this system functions or to be
formally trained with the hives.
Two small
starter hives are the beginning of a new apiary for Kwao Adams on a property he
owns in the hills above the ocean on the north coast of Jamaica. They will
eventually be moved into a permanent four- or five-foot hives for honey
production, taking advantage of the lush vegetation located on much of the
island.
In
the two years since this ideal of an alternative beekeeping was set in motion,
both the Adams and Hebert agree that it is beginning to show benefits and will
be successful. The project has now grown to encompass all the bee farming associations
located in the island’s 14 parishes.
The technology and information transfer through the
Farmer-to-Farmer volunteers is giving hope to these Jamaican beekeepers through
practical and suitable alternatives, Agape Adams said. There is now a way for
new beekeepers to viably begin and have continued success with honey
production.
“Like
the implementation of any new type of agricultural technology, you won´t see a
change overnight,” Hebert noted. “It takes time. You need to reach the
beekeepers and show them the benefits of top bar hives and teach them how to
use them. You need to have patience.”
Just
in the St. Thomas Bee Farmers Association in southeast Jamaica, where Hebert
recently held a training workshop, several of the beekeepers said they have now
implemented these hives in their bee operations.
“I
see a lot of interested bee farmers every single place we go,” said Kwao Adams.
“A lot of farmers are interested in top bar hives and would love to have more
training and exposure. All of them talk about wanting to get their own top bar
hives started.”
Kwao
added that he has also been hearing from those beekeepers who already have implemented
top bar hives that they “want to go deeper into them; they want to increase
those numbers.”
A healthy hive of bees housed in a simple top bar hive
made from wood and burlap bags. Bees are left to build combs in the way they
deem necessary, which helps keeps the bees more healthy.
Both
Hebert and the Adams agree that the advantages of the hive are the low cost to
build and operate them and the ability to manage the bees in a much more
natural and healthier manner.
“Top
bar hives allow the beekeeper to do a much more natural-type of management,”
Hebert commented. “Bees have been around for millions of years, surviving
without the help of man. They know what to do.”
“In
Langstroth hives the beekeeper is actually forcing the bees to do something
that is unnatural to them, forcing them to behave in a way that is convenient
for the beekeeper but not for themselves.”
A
top bar hive is a movable comb system that consists of one large horizontal box
covered with a series of approximately 30 to 35 bars. The bees build and
organize their nests naturally, building one comb from each of the bars. The
combs can be removed for inspections or harvests.
By
comparison, the Langstroth hive is a movable frame system where the hive can be
expanded vertically by adding more boxes. Each box usually contains 10 frames
which are equipped with a sheet of wax foundation, a cell embossed guide the bees
use to draw out their comb in the frame. The system is also designed to use an
extractor, a centrifuge which is used to spin the honey from the combs.
A top bar
hive incorporated with Langstroth hives in the apiary of a beekeeper from the
parish of St. Mary, Jamaica. Through the Farmer to Farmer trainings, more and
more Jamaican beekeepers are seeing these hives as a viable alternative or
addition to their beekeeping.
Jamaican
beekeepers face a certain set of unique problems, Agape Adams pointed out. In order to protect the island’s bees from the
Colony Collapse Disorder that is affecting bees around the world, the Jamaican
government has banned imports of all bee products, including honey, wax and
queens.
Although
beekeepers appreciate the protection, according to Agape, the ban has made it
difficult to access inexpensive and abundant beeswax for making foundation for
the frames in the nation’s Langstroth hives.
Top bar hives do not require these sheets.
“In
a poor country, beekeeping offers a way for people to add an income stream that
can help to support their families,” she said.
“It is difficult, however, when the only option is the Langstroth
method, which can be expensive. When a
pound of beeswax costs the daily earnings of someone working a minimum wage, it
is not practical.
“(Langstroth
hives) are not always practical here because they are net consumers of beeswax
while top bar hives are net producers of beeswax,” Agape added.
Kwao
Adams mentioned that a beekeeper could probably get more honey with a Langstroth
hive but these fall short with their overall production because of the disease
or pest problems many of them usually have. A greater percentage of top bar
hives produce an excess of honey when compared with the Langstroth.
“I
like to keep a couple (Langstroth hives) as a comparison but I wouldn’t go
back, it’s much cheaper and I’m satisfied with the honey production (of top bar
hives),” he said.
Kwao
mentioned being able to build five top bar hives for what it would cost to buy
the wooden ware for one complete Langstroth hive. The costs of Langstroth
equipment is prohibitive for many Jamaicans, even those who already have bees
and want to increase.
Top bar
hives do not require advance carpentry skills to build. Members of the St. Mary
Bee Farmers Association discovered this during a Farmer to Farmer workshop on
top bar hive construction. Scrap pieces are used to make the floor.
“Top
bar hives can easily be built by the beekeepers,” Hebert said. The boxes are
simple and don’t require advanced carpentry skills. The variety of materials
that can be used to even further reduce costs is incredible—bamboo, grass, banana
leaf ribs, crocus/burlap bags, Celotex hardboard and even tin cans.”
Hebert
has been using these hives for the past 20 years in Honduras. He said most of
his are made using recycled materials because of the need to keep costs low.
Frame hives, by comparison, require the use of good wood and precision
carpentry since the measurements must be exact to ensure they function
properly, according to Hebert.
“Jamaica
and Honduras are the same in the sense that many, many people in both countries
have serious economic problems but want to find a way to generate extra
income,” Hebert said. “These simple hives offer that to them while not
requiring the money that is needed to put food on the family’s table or
notebooks in their children’s backpacks.”
Agape
Adams added that the income generating projects in Jamaica that donate
Langstroth hives to people simply are not sustainable. The cost of the
equipment prohibits easily expanding the number of hives or managing them as
they are designed.
Kwao
Adams also mentioned that top bar hives are easier to inspect, the bees stay calmer,
there is no heavy lifting, and you don’t have to deal with a lot of extra
equipment.
“(Top
bar hives) are a lot easier to manage than Langstroth hives but I think they
take more attention,” he said. “They (the bees) are more friendly.”
Kwao Adams
and two of his sons check on the progress of a recently caught swarm. The
inexpensive nature of the top bar hive has allowed Adams to build many in order
to take advantage of the abundance of swarms he sees. His apiaries now contain
60 hives.
The
management, although simple, is one drawback. These hives need a bit more
management and a different type of management than the more well-known movable
frame bee hives, which means more training, Kwao said. At present this training
is not meeting the demand.
With
a steady supply of training resources the Adams believe there could be a shift
in beekeeping on the island. Beekeepers could be running their operations a lot
cheaper than what they are now and more effectively.
The
result of the present Farmer to Farmer training, however, is evident in Rachel
Neil, a mother of one and a grandmother of three who has benefited from this
project. She has hopes of improving her life through the sales of honey.
Neil
now has one top bar hive on her property in the north coast village of Robins
Bay, St. Mary. She has been to many of
the trainings around the island and is a member of Robins Bay Bee Club, hosted
by the Adams farm and supported by Farmer to Farmer volunteers. Because of the skills training that she has
received, Rachel feels confident as she cares for her hive, and has plans to
expand her apiary.
Rachel Neil participates in a top bar hive management training held by
Hebert in 2013. A bee colony was simulated using photocopies of actual combs,
allowing the beekeepers to calmly discuss and learn about different hive
management practices.
“This Farmer-to-Farmer program is changing the entire
beekeeping industry in Jamaica,” Agape Adams said, “by importing ideas and skills;
to make the ideas work. So you have this expansion of people’s minds and
expansion of people’s horizons by expanding what is possible.”
Things that were unworkable before with the one option
Jamaican had for beekeeping are now workable with these options the Farmer-to-Farmer volunteers are presenting. Agape mentioned the only reason her family is
managing bees and have hopes and dreams is because of the skills and expertise
they are receiving through the Farmer-to-Farmer project.
“I
honestly believe that the future of beekeeping in Jamaica will be with the top
bar hive,” Kwao Adams said. “It won’t be the only type around but it’s what
makes sense.”
Hebert showing the St. Mary Bee Farmers Association members how to build
a simple pollen trap that can be used on their top bar hives. Although normally
considered feasible only with Langstroth hives, pollen collection is as productive
if not better with a top bar hive.
To learn more about top bar hives and
economical/sustainable/natural beekeeping, check out Tom Hebert's blog at http://musingsonbeekeeping.blogspot.com/
To learn more about Yerba Buena Farm check out their
website at: http://yerbabuenafarmjamaica.com/
Also check out James Imbrie’s blog. James, an intern
this summer at Yerba Buena Farm, has been participating in the recent beekeeping trainings
and their preparations. http://somebeesplease.tumblr.com/
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