As you watch the clip, it will show how thousands of colonies of bees are trucked across the country to perform pollination in the almond orchards of California and then they are loaded up and taken to Georgia (peaches, I presume?) and then they are trucked to Pennsylvania to pollinate apples and then on up to Maine to pollinate blueberries. I think that's how the term 'busy as a bee' came about. In all, these bees travel 8,000 miles a year on the back of an 18 wheeler! The documentary shows a map that traces their movement across our nation and they are trucked right through our area. I remember thinking to myself, I'm on I-10 a lot and I've never seen an 18 wheeler carrying bees. Well, I can't say that anymore.
The other afternoon heading home, I was approaching a truck with a strange net or curtain covering up what appeared to be white boxes.
What is on the back of that truck? |
As I got nearer to the truck, it hit me. A bee trucker! I made a bee-line for the truck (sorry, couldn't resist!) and snapped this photo:
Honeybee truckers |
I googled to learn about trucking honeybees. It is dangerous work. A few interesting facts about bee truckers:
- Drivers earn $3 per mile or more!
- It is a short bee-trucking season,
- You load at night since bees gather pollen and nectar during daylight,
- You drive all day and don't stop. Gas station operators don't like customers swarmed by bees at the pumps. (So how do you use the restroom? Serious question. Maybe I don't want to know!)
- You must water bees down in hot climates. They generate lots of heat and die if they're too hot.
- Count on getting stung driving bees. Truckers average 4 stings per trip. Oh, carry Benadryl and make sure you're not allergic to bees or the job could be your last.
- Drive carefully! You're carrying active swarms of millions or billions of bees. Bee safe.
A blooming pear tree |
Making a beeline for the peach blossom |
Pollinating the Peaches |
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