Been watching interesting but scary films about honey bees, colony collapse disorder (CCD) and wider issues.
When we had an allotment (early part of the noughties), a Belgian friend kept bees and was worried about them being ill. Since then, this issue has really hit the media.
In 'Vanishing of Bees' (2009), we learn that pollination was worth $50 billions a year in the USA around 2009. I suppose that's why people started paying attention. Great explanation of the impact of monoculture and pesticides, old and new.
Unfortunately, the subtitles of the French interview are incorrect. They mention bad French keepers, whereas the interviewee talks about the French (bee) disease. The French state led the way by banning Bayer's Gaucho systemic pesticide. The UK and the USA have not followed in these foot steps.
'More than Honey' (2012) is very powerful. It contains very precise elements about the science of bee keeping, from queen breeding to parasites. I have been haunted by the fate of this poor old man who had to destroy his great-grandfather's hive of native black honey bees contaminated in a secluded valley in the middle of the Alps. The sights of bees in the post and pollination by human hands in China are also shocking.
It's also interesting to hear one almond tree grower defend monoculture on the basis of his 35 years' experience, whereas in 'Vanishing of the Bees' they showed how almond tree growers demanded the import of Australian bees to compensate for the loss of American bees to CCD. It was reported in February 2015 that this same grower, owner of Paramount, has now purchased Headwaters Farm, which was founded by Dave Mendes, who featured in Vanishing.
Commercial bee-keeping is just mind-boggling: they drive hives around the USA to pesticide-stuffed orchards (two-week window in February in California for almonds, apple and cherry blossom in Washington in March-April, apricot tree in North Dakota in the summer, etc.), where the colonies contaminate each other, and they feed bees sugar water and antibiotics.
15,000 hives at $150 per 2-week stay - are we looking at $7 million yearly turnover?
See the Co-operative's Plan Bee initiative.
See the Soil Association's Keep Britain Buzzing campaign.
See Friends of the Earth's The Bee Cause campaign.
Please sign 38 Degrees' petition to keep the ban on bee-killing pesticides.
#savebees
Wednesday, 22 July 2015
Friday, 17 July 2015
Brighton Waste House - I'd live there!
Found out about this house/ project in an email from Good Day at Work that has been sitting in my inbox for a while, and led to this article in the Guardian.
Look at this! How amazing is it? I love the look of that house covered in carpet tiles,
and the carpentry students did a wonderful job inside.
We got rid of hundreds of VHS tapes and boxes last year so I can relate to this. I'm not convinced it's safe to use the VHS tapes for insulation because they are full of harmful chemicals - I suppose you'd have to remove the tape from the casing first. But the boxes - yes, why not?
The headlining 20,000 toothbrushes, the Guardian tells us, 'came from a company that cleans planes after long-haul flights. This vast quantity represents the harvest of just four days'. Now that's scary...
I'm curious to know how well they will fare in the insulating quality tests.
For further details, visit the architect's website: BBM. It looks like they have already produced a lot of eco-friendly projects. There's also a list of articles where the house was featured - I just read the first one to find more pictures.
Sunday, 12 April 2015
Sewing activities - projects to finish
At some point, I will finish the patchwork star cushion cover I started in September 2014.
Since then, I also started:
an Advent bunting (2 workshops with French Knots in Sale in Nov14),
a Dorset brooch that I carry in my handbag at all times - easy to keep oneself occupied whilst waiting (Jan15),
a patchwork clock (just need to sew the buttons) (Jan15) and
a bamboo handle bag (missed half of the workshop because I was finishing some work at home; at least I had time to cut the fabric - Feb15).
I did manage to finish the squishy patchwork cushion I started on 31/03/15:
I also had a lovely time at the parent and child sewing workshop. The options were an owl or a dog, but DS1 wanted to make a dinosaur:
DS1 chose the fabrics and learned to pin the pattern to the fabric and to do running stitch and back stitch, and to sew on buttons.
http://www.frenchknots.co.uk/
Since then, I also started:
an Advent bunting (2 workshops with French Knots in Sale in Nov14),
a Dorset brooch that I carry in my handbag at all times - easy to keep oneself occupied whilst waiting (Jan15),
a patchwork clock (just need to sew the buttons) (Jan15) and
a bamboo handle bag (missed half of the workshop because I was finishing some work at home; at least I had time to cut the fabric - Feb15).
I did manage to finish the squishy patchwork cushion I started on 31/03/15:
I also had a lovely time at the parent and child sewing workshop. The options were an owl or a dog, but DS1 wanted to make a dinosaur:
DS1 chose the fabrics and learned to pin the pattern to the fabric and to do running stitch and back stitch, and to sew on buttons.
http://www.frenchknots.co.uk/
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