As featured June 2, 2012, on www.cnjonline.com
I was hiking with my dog many moons ago and as we sat resting and
enjoying the mountain view, a ruckus from down below interrupted our
peaceful contemplation.
There, thrashing and hollering, running full tilt through the woods, we caught glimpses of what appeared to be a Boyscout troop.
But there was no need to see the monster they were fleeing, their body language said it all.
Arms
flailing and somehow managing to wiggle and run at the same time, the
invisible foe terrorizing them might as well have been as big as life.
After all, sometimes that's just what happens when you find a beehive.
Of
course not even close to the same magnitude, there was the time in my
childhood when I was walking barefoot through a clover patch and got a
bumble bee stuck between my toes.
Suffice it to say, with first
impressions carrying the weight they do, these are the kinds of memories
that become hardwired in your brain for a long, long time.
Last
week, as I was writing a column on beneficial insects, I'll admit, I
hesitated before making a "bad bug" list, knowing it was iffy territory
because all insects have a vital role in the natural world, and therefor
they are all beneficial on one level or another.
So much in fact,
that I can never foresee a situation where eradication of any species
is called for, no matter how annoying or potentially vicious they can
be.
Even flies, which are undeniably gross and annoy us, provide
the critical service of waste disposal by aiding in the decomposition of
biological materials (go maggots!)
And bees, who I also named to
the "bad bug" list, not only give us honey, but are great stewards of
their worlds by pollinating plants and making our gardens healthy and
beautiful.
Truthfully, even though some of their characteristics
may land them on a "bad bug" list, an insect's impact on people and the
environment needs to be weighed case-by-case. An angry bee hive = bad, a
happy bumble bee carting pollen from one side of your garden to the
other = good.
I was reminded of the distinctions when, in response
to the beneficial insect column, a reader sent me a link to a story
about a recently discovered solitary bee in the Middle East, the Osmia
avoseta (definitely worth a Google.)
The closest thing to true
flower faeries our world will ever see, the hard-working mothers of this
species cut pieces from colorful flower petals to create little
petal-mache cocoon nurseries bound together with nectar as cradles for
their young.
These sweet, bee-made flower tubes are beyond
beautiful in their perfection and the mother bee puts them together with
the utmost care and attention to detail.
I will admit that while reading about the flower artistry, I cringed.
Bees are not all bad.
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