Monday, 29 March 2010

designer beehives!




check out this little thing I did on sunday. This is up in North London. Was really great to get away from the city and breath fresh air..met a badger and also some bumble bees as well..bzzz bzzz bzzzzz...ohh also check out this little video. I stuck a super mini camera on a bee, and it flew with it all the way back home..bzzzzzz

Sunday, 21 March 2010

the story of lilly bee...






I've been working on a few illustrations for a children's book about a family of bees that move into an urban environment. check!

Saturday, 20 March 2010

sweet little victory for NYC




Sweet relief for untold numbers of outlaw New York City beekeepers came Tuesday in what was probably the most-anticipated vote ever taken by the board of the city's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene:Honeybees may now be kept legallyin the five boroughs. Astory inThe New York TimesMonday reported on the impending vote, and estimated that "hundreds" of New Yorkers were already keeping bees in violation of the health code.

Previously, bees had been classified as a prohibited "wild animal" under Title IV of theHealth Code, Article 161, Section 161.01, listed among a diverse group that includes everything from polar and grizzly bears to raccoons and cat-bears to squirrels, bats, snapping turtles, condors ... and, of course, "all venomous insects, including, but not limited to, bee, hornet and wasp." While it's certain that many of these wild animals (not the bears, but surely the venomous insects, the squirrels and the raccoons) live happily in the public parks and backyards of New York City, if they are kept on purpose by residents, the health department can levy fines of between $200 and $2,000 -- and some beekeepers have received the maximum penalty.

"I am over the moon about today's ruling, as are many of my friends in the New York Beekeepers Association and other beekeeping groups in the NYC area," said Megan Paska, beekeeper ofBrooklyn Honeyand organizer of theBrooklyn Society of Urban Homesteaders, which teaches classes on a variety of skills -- among them, urban beekeeping. "It's a relief to know that we no longer have to fear being penalized for doing something we all truly believe is beneficial to our community."

See full article from DailyFinance:http://srph.it/bFakjw

Tuesday, 9 March 2010

designer beehives??


Bees are said to recognise their homes, and remember shapes, forms, and colours. What if we actually gave them more of a 'home' feel to their hives so they can come back to their own designed homes after a long and hard day of collecting pollen and nectar. No place like home ;)






Wednesday, 3 March 2010

Bee Footprint in consumer products



How much bee involvement are there in each of the things we eat? I've done a couple of experiments and found some quite shocking results. For example, Innocent Smoothie's Blackberrys Strawberries & Boysenberries flavour's ingredients are 3 pressed apples (40%) 2 bananas, 19 grapes (9%), 6 strawberries (9%), 22 crushed blackberries (9%), 17 crushed boysenberries (8%), 3/4 of squeezed orange, 9 crushed blackcurrants (4%), and a dash of lime (1.5%).

This equals more than 70% of the ingredients are pollinated by bees. How will these companies survive when the bee population is forecasted to be extinct by 2035?

I guess innocent smoothies aren't as innocent as they apprear. They've all a huge bee footprint in each product.