Revery - Jenna Butler - E-Book

Revery E-Book

Jenna Butler

0,0
6,88 €

-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

Starting in late November as the bees are settling in for winter Jenna Butler takes us through a year of beekeeping on her small piece of the boreal forest. She considers the impact of crop sprays, and debates the impact of introduced flowers versus native flowers, the effect of colony collapse disorder and the protection of natural environments for wild bees. But this is also the story of women and bees and how beekeeping became Butler's personal survival story.

Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:

Android
iOS
von Legimi
zertifizierten E-Readern

Seitenzahl: 123

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



Revery: A Year of Bees cover

about this book

In this delicate yet powerful book Jenna Butler shares her journey into beekeeping on her small northern farm. With glowing descriptions Butler captures the beauty of her surroundings and the wonder of working with these complex creatures within their hives, charting the progress of both throughout the year. But this is also a book of difficult truths, of climate change and species loss and personal grief, all of which Butler faces with honesty. This mixture of wonder and grief and perseverance is a potent one and Revery is a book that many will reach for as they consider their own reckoning with our changing environment.

other titles by jenna butler

Aphelion

Magnetic North: Sea Voyage to Svalbard

A Profession of Hope: Farming on the Edge of the Grizzly Trail

Seldom Seen Road

Wells

Revery

A Year of Bees

Jenna Butler

Dedication

to hope

Epigraph

To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee,One clover, and a bee.And revery.The revery alone will do,If bees are few.– Emily Dickinson

Attention is the beginning of devotion.– Mary Oliver

Contents

Cover

About This Book

Also by Jenna Butler

Title Page

Dedication

Epigraph

Contents

1: Introduction

2: Building Home: Learning the Ecosystems of the Farm

3: Superorganism

4: Homing Day

5: Sweet White Gold

6: Emergence

7: A Careful Balance: Wild Bees Versus Domesticated Honeybees

8: Beekeeping in Company: A Chronology of Community

9: Beekeeping at the Edge of the Boreal

10: How You Heal: The Medicine of the Hive

11: Shuttering the Season

12: Tell It to the Bees

13: Conclusion

Acknowledgements

Bibliography

About the Author

Copyright

Introduction

It’s almost December, the days dimming rapidly toward the turn of the year. Up here in the boreal forest of Alberta, the low sun clears the horizon and noses into our market garden around nine o’clock in the morning. It spends much of the day skimming just above the thick fringe of black spruce, willow and paper birch bordering our small farm, offering a few welcome hours of light to the house and our winter-wrapped garden. We moved the farm across the quarter section last year, after yet another county-wide flood – a Herculean task involving skid-steers, a couple of large trucks, a half-mile of new gravel driveway and plenty of impromptu rollers – but it was worth it for the gorgeous light and air up on the old hayfield, and the precious higher ground away from an increasingly unstable muskeg. Up here, we’re rebuilding our much-loved garden and hardy orchard after resuscitating the hammered-down hayfield turf through regenerative agriculture, constructing a new greenhouse and reconstituting the life of the farm that was almost lost to flooding over the past five summers.

On a day like today, the small warmth of the sun along the hayfield shelterbelt counterbalances the air temperature just enough to get the bees stirring. As the sun reaches its height in the early afternoon, they spell each other on cleaning flights from the hive, short bursts into the late November air to relieve themselves and to feel the sun for a moment, here in the heart of winter. It’s a precarious dance with no margin for error: fly too far or too high, and the cold will seep into their tiny bodies in a way that the meagre warmth of the sun cannot counter. Brief freedom on a mid-winter day can have a high cost for honeybees up here in the boreal.

The colonies are active in spite of the cold – a few daring workers coming and going, a scant handful of overexuberant fliers scattered prone on the snow beyond the safe range of flight from the hive. The guard bees thrum to the upper entrance as I blow gently into the opening; they’re reacting to the warmth of my breath and the stirring of the air. They buzz worriedly in response to the intrusion, then quickly calm. I don’t know whether bees have the ability to recognize faces the way the resident crows and ravens do, but we’ve worked with these hives through the warm months without any beekeeping gear, and the queens are used to us by now. I’d like to think that the worker bees realize I’m only checking in on them, hoping against hope that these hives will make it through the long winter. My husband, Thomas, and I can make sure that the hives are clean and safe, well-stocked with honey and bundled with insulating blankets to protect against the cold, but once the temperature dips, the bees are on their own for the worst of the dark months; we can’t break the seals on a hive in the middle of winter to check how everyone is doing. I wonder if they recognize my breath at the entrance not as threat but as concern? I hope you’re okay in there, lovelies. I hope you’re warm.

Our five-year partnership with the bees has been beneficial to both sides. The bees have been welcomed onto a farm that practises the principles of organic living, employing no pesticides, herbicides or industrial chemicals. The hives have access to twenty acres of organic cover crops and pollinator belts sown specifically for them in the garden – buckwheat, alfalfa and sweet yellow clover; borage and phacelia; dill and sunflowers – as well as 140 acres of untouched boreal forest rich in wildflowers, catkins and leaf buds. We tend our small apiary carefully, using close monitoring and organic treatments in lieu of heavy-duty sprays and powders, with the long-term goal of raising resilient, hardy colonies and queen bees that are accustomed to our harsh climate. Five years in, we are enthusiastic novice beekeepers, learning something new during each season of our partnership with the bees. We’re devoted to our work with the handful of hives that share this space with us, and even more so to the hundreds of thousands of wild bees that call this piece of the boreal home. Our goal has always been to provide and sustain the best life possible for them out here in the forest and among the plants in our garden, under the vast expanse of northern sky.

Along with our growing awareness of the bees’ delicate ecosystems and the careful balance required to maintain them, both the wild and domesticated bees share so much with us. Our off-grid farmhouse is powered by a small solar array, but it’s also lit at night by beeswax tapers that we dip ourselves. The raw honey from our hives, stirred into hot lemon and ginger drinks, speeds us through the many illnesses of winter, and the clean white flakes of capping wax add a healing richness to the balms and salves that I make from plants harvested in the garden and out in the forest. When Thomas and I work together each year to can, dry and freeze food for the winter, and when I hang bunches of herbs to dry for tea, we’re deeply aware that very little of our food would be possible without the constant, quiet attention of the solitary bees that pollinate most of our crops. And, perhaps best of all for our morale – for sheer joy – the company of the bees is constant and welcome in our market garden and flower beds from March through October. They are the underpinning soundtrack and life force of the farm.

Working with both honeybees and wild bees brings us a deep sense of hope and well-being. They’ve taught us much about calmness and contentment – both necessary emotions when working with busy hives and living an off-grid life that can be strenuous in its seasonal tasks – and about the fine balance required to keep a colony thriving into and through the depths of winter. They’ve instructed us in resilience, too, in the improbability of their lives in this harsh and changing climate. Mostly, though, the bees have shown us a great deal about how necessary it is to find hope under threat, and how vital it is to protect wild spaces and manage urban development to keep pollinators safe.

My own path to the bees was a journey toward healing. I turned to beekeeping as a last, desperate swipe at personal resilience and recovery. Years of harm and injury sustained as a teen had taken away my ability to trust, to feel as though I could face my fear and move past it whole. Working with the bees has given me back my sense of agency, and it has granted me entry into a community of like-minded people who, for their own deep reasons, have found solace and empowerment in beekeeping. You go into beekeeping knowing you’ll be stung, but along the way, you learn that if your energy and your practice are correct, you’ll be able to build a relationship with those bees over time. Yes, you’ll get hurt as part of that journey, and, especially if you’re a new beekeeper, you might have to face down a fair amount of fear. Ultimately, though, the connection to the bees, to the land on which you maintain your hives and to other keepers is worth it.

Revery chronicles a year of beekeeping and off-grid life here in northern Alberta, a province known and maligned around the globe for its oil and gas industries. What’s not as well known is that Alberta is also the largest honey producer in Canada, and one of the largest in the world. The honey industry is rapidly shifting, moving away from being a male-dominated space focused primarily on large-scale bee yards. Today, many beekeepers in the province are women and, increasingly, contemporary beekeepers in Alberta tend a small number of hives in a way that is integrated with the surrounding ecosystems, including an awareness of the populations of wild bees. People are turning to beekeeping for reasons beyond the financial: in the tending of their hives, they find community, connection to place and healing.

The keeping of bees is a blending of science and spirit; a passion that is, at its roots, an act of hope. As we wake each day into a world reconfigured by climate change, COVID-19 and the fallout from our own human error, we find in ourselves a deeper necessity for a craft that allows us to look at the world around us with that vanishing and vital sense of wonder.

Building Home

Learning the Ecosystems of the Farm

I’m up early again this morning to stoke the wood stove. It’s been a rough night, one of many: the temperature has lingered around minus-forty degrees Celsius all week. The wind across the deep snow is dry and penetrating. The cold pushes at the windows and creeps in around the edge of the door, coating the knob in frost and the glass in a rime of ice. Thomas and I have been taking turns getting up every few hours through the night and rebuilding the fire from its quick, cold ashes; in this chill, even our sturdy cookstove has been hard pressed to hold the heat in its belly.

I’m quick in the pre-dawn cold, scraping ashes into the can for the compost heap, laying out a framework of kindling and shavings, lighting the rich fatwood with its scent of tamarack resin. As the fire slowly builds and the chimney warms into a decent draw, I huddle at the kitchen table with a beeswax taper and a seed catalogue. On these bitter grey late-January days, the catalogues are as much about healing winter-worn spirits as they are about preparing for the market garden season to come. I dawdle and dream in the candlelight, feeling the stove’s warmth as it slowly begins to radiate. Upstairs, Thomas and the cats snooze through the early hours; down here by the fire, I am already doodling seed lists and bed layouts in my garden plan book. I set up our market garden each year with three factors in mind: food, pollinator support and beauty. With the farm’s move up to the old hayfield, we’ve got a lot of ongoing work to do in resuscitating the packed ground into a finer tilth and the soil into a more resilient structure – a great deal is depending on this earth. We need to fill our pantry and freezer each year from the market garden, and once the soil is in better health, we’ll begin to offer food boxes to our community again. With our small apiary, and with greater and greater awareness of the diverse array of wild bees on the farm, we strive to plant large pollinator belts and flowering organic cover crops, and to support and encourage native wildflowers. And with my desire to bring organic local flowers to our community, we’ve been thinking deeply about planting for beauty, too, with tall stands of sweet peas and beds of zinnias, gladiolas, strawflowers and dahlias for cutting. All of this makes for a joyous jumble of plans and ideas when the seed catalogues arrive in the middle of the cold months.

We’ve been building our farm for fourteen years now, though we’ve only been up on the hayfield for a short time. In the life of a family farm passed down from generation to generation, fourteen years is the blink of an eye. In the lifetime of the land on which we live, it’s scarcely a ripple. Our farm is located on Treaty 6 land, the traditional territories of the Cree, Dene, Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Saulteaux, Nakota Sioux and Métis Nations, who have lived on and stewarded this place for much, much longer than we have.

In the timeline of our small off-grid farm created from scratch, those fourteen years of working with the land have taught us more than we could ever have dreamed of at the onset, and they have made us realize how much we still have to learn. The old adage once again proves true: The more I know, the more I know I don’t know. That’s the paradox of working with the land in a sustainable way, learning its cycles and seasons, the length of time it takes to build up soil, ecosystems and resilient pollinator populations. The Earth is a constant teacher.