Ciao! Aug/Sept 2016 Digital Issue | Page 8

foodsources the buzz around town Beeproject Apiaries proves that urban hives are the bee’s knees. As more and more people migrate into cities, it becomes harder to connect consumers with where their food comes from. Take honey: when spooning a glossy golden drizzle into a mug of tea, buzzing bees are far from top of mind. But with pollinator populations on the decline, the honey bee has become the symbol of a pressing environmental issue. Most of Canada’s bees are found in the Prairie provinces, with 66% of Canada’s total number of colonies housed here (Manitoba accounts for about 13% of the nation’s total). While prairie populations are on a fluctuating, weak rise, around the world bee numbers continue to drop. This struggle has been steady since the 1950s with a sharp decrease seen in the early aughts. According to a report released earlier this year by the UN, 75% of the world’s food crops are dependent on pollination, yet almost half of invertebrate pollinator species, including bees and butterflies, are facing extinction. A bleak, bee-less world would mean no more canola, coffee or cranberries, or many of the other fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds and oils we enjoy today. As the threat of declining numbers of these hapless hard workers has moved from the consciousness of scientists to that of the 6 ciao! / aug/sep / two thousand sixteen general public, concerned folks have taken it upon themselves to help save the bees. “There is a lot of interest in bees as a result of the problems associated with high colony losses, but also concerns over the environment and local food production,” comments Robert Currie, head of entomology at the University of Manitoba. Many are beginning to look in a new direction: beekeeping within the city. As Currie notes, “Urban beekeeping contributes to the pollination of vegetables, fruits and ornamentals in the city’s managed gardens and native ecosystems.” Urban beekeeping has caught hold as the potential saviour of the future of our food and of our connection to its production. In Manitoba, the vanguards of this movement are Chris and Lindsay Kirouac, owners of Beeproject Apiaries. The couple, who met through the nursing program at the University of Manitoba (and continue to work as nurses part-time) are selfdescribed “DIYers”—Chris and Lindsay were already making their own yogurt and keeping chickens in the backyard of their Wolseley-area home before setting up their first hobby hive in 2009. The couple continued on their merry beekeeping way until they realized that the city Photography: Courtesy of Beeproject Apiaries By Janice Tober and Joelle Kidd