Autumn in the Garden

Autumn in the Garden
Autumn in the Garden: Cosmos Forest for our chitinous and feathered friends

Sunday, February 16, 2014

BEES and Updates

Rusty Patch Bumblebee Listed as Endangered -- a First!

Jan. 10, 2017

This bumblebee is in a race against extinction and was listed today on the endangered species list by the US Fish & Wildlife Service.  This is the first bee of any type in the continental US to be placed on the list.
Habitat loss is one of several factors for its endangerment.  We can help boost the population of this insect by adding a native flowering tree or shrub to our yards. Leaving some areas of the yard unmowed in summer and unraked in fall can also help.  This provides a safe place to build nests and overwinter. In winter, leave some standing plant stems in the garden and flower beds.

Read more about the Rusty Patch Bumblebee listing and its dramatic decline.

BEEseeching Valentines for Home Depot & Lowes

CAMPAIGN UPDATE from OCA (Organic Consumers Assn)  Feb. 14, 2014

Just the Beeginning

They showed up in bee costumes. Carrying Valentine’s Day cards and cookies. Singing Give bees a chance. To add a little theater to the mix, some of them staged bee die-ins.

Activists in Boston, Chicago, Eugene, Ore., Minneapolis, Washington D.C. and San Francisco converged on their local Home Depot and Lowe’s stores this week with this message: Show bees some love. Stop selling garden plants coated in bee-killing pesticides.

The demonstrations were part of a national Bee Week of Action
which included deliveries of valentines to managers of Home Depot and Lowe’s stores, coast to coast.

The actions, organized by Friends of the Earth, the Organic Consumers Association and 10 other groups, included collecting more than a half million signatures on petitions to Home Depot and Lowe’s, and sending letters to the CEOs of both companies.

Home Depot responded this week, to say the company is working on a policy to address neonics. We’re hopeful Lowe’s will reach out soon.

This week was just the beginning of what will be a sustained campaign to educate consumers and press retailers to replace bee-killing plants with organic, pesticide-free alternatives.

From the Back Yard Beekeepers Association & EarthJustice
  • A hive of bees will collect about 66 pounds of pollen per year.
  • A queen bee can live for several years.
  • Workers live for 6 weeks in the summer and several months in winter.
  • Workers in a hive tap 2 million flowers to make one pound of honey.
  • By clustering, bees keep the temperature of the hive around 93ºF
  • Worker bees are female.  Drones are male.
  • Drones die after mating.

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