There are no products in your shopping cart.
20% off — was $18.95
Sale through January 1, 2010
In this book, Gunther Hauk "invites the reader to experience the innate intelligence and wonder of the natural world.” In addition to being a guide to the care and protection of the honeybee, that invaluable member of our life sustaining agroecology, this popular text demonstrates how the ills plaguing our honeybees proceed from the ills in our manner of living and doing business. Recently reprinted due to popular demand, this life-ennobling book could just as easily be titled “Toward Saving our Humanity!"
Topics covered include:
Excerpts:
“In a temperate climate the honeybee needs housing for warmth and protection, for unlike the wasp, it cannot build that outer sheath by itself. When bees live in the wild, they are free to find residence in the crevice of a rock wall or inside a hollow tree. However, as the honeybee became domesticated, men found and developed other types of homes for htem. As early as prehistoric times, mankind possessed an instinct for habitat, and showed an intuitive sense for the effects of forms on living beings. By perceiving the nature of the bee it was obvious to these peoples that a round shape was appropriate for a hive. Through study and observation, we can now conclude that early man was quite perceptive and correctly understood the instinctual nature of bees and their innate ‘architectural’ requirements for a healthy and productive beehive.”
“People who have found themselves in the midst of a mighty swarm or who have observed this incredible act from a distance cannot help but admit that the experience itself evokes rather indescribable thoughts and emotions. Swarming is a powerful and vibrant expression of a healthy, well-functioning bee colony. It is at once mysterious, lucid and transcendent. Swarming supersedes, by its very display and magnitude, all that is commonplace, ‘status quo’ and subdued in our everyday human activity. We may discover upon closer examination why swarming is so intrinsic to the bee’s physical and spiritual health.”
Author Bio: Gunther Hauk is an educator of long standing and a biodynamic gardener as well as beekeeper for over 30 years. He co-founded the Pfeiffer Center in Spring Valley, New York, in 1996, where he developed a successful biodynamic part-time training and taught at Sunbridge College. Since then he has given many organic beekeeping workshops all over the continent. In 2006 he co-founded the not-for-profit organization, Spikenard Farm, Inc., and in 2007 moved to the heartland with his wife. With a team of idealistic individuals, he is converting the 610 acres into biodynamic management and creating a honeybee sanctuary. The farm was purchased by a donor for this vision and is located in western central Illinois. Working to help save the honeybee is dear to his heart.
Related Literature: Bees, by Rudolf Steiner
Author: Gunther Hauk
Paperback: 81 pages
Illustrations: Black and white and color photos
Publisher: Biodynamic Farming and Gardening Association
Dimensions: 9 x 5.5 inches