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Page 10 News Street Roots • April 14-20, 2017 Easy backyard beekeeping Forget honeybees, you can be a backyard beekeeper with m inim al .effort when you host native bees BY EMILY GREEN apple or other fruit trees. It’s also quite gentle compared to the honeybee, Golden ackyard beekeeping is big in Portland, said. While honeybees live in large colonies but it’s also increasing in popularity that need to be managed, a single female worldwide, said mason bee will take bee educator Rebekah care of all her own Golden. Get a permit young. She teaches classes Bee Thinking on how to be a You can visit Portland Urban builds several backyard beekeeper at Beekeepers’ website to learn alternative models of Bee Thinking, a locally more about the permitting process at backyard hives for owned beekeeping portlandurbanbeekeepers.org. honeybees, made supply store and j Take a class j f ..... from sustainably education center in sourced wood grown Southeast Portland. Bee Thinking offers beginner in the Pacific But she didn’t beekeeping classes for $30. Northwest. For those always like bees. Her typically held from 6 to 9 p.m who want to keep entire life, Golden Wednesdays and Saturdays. honeybees, starter said, she was “quite kits range upward fearful” of the little from $99 without the pollinators. She hive, and $349 with a originally studied hive. ecology and But for about $20 evolutionary biology at to $30, they also offer the University of mason bee houses Arizona with the you can stock with intent of studying paper tubing for bees chimps in Africa. It was when she to nest in. These worked as a research small houses look assistant in a more like birdhouses bumblebee pollination than beehives and lab that she require very little maintenance. discovered bees were far more docile and unique than she had ever imagined. Mason bee houses can hang from a “I fell in love with them,” she said. building or in a tree, and should be about 6 feet off the ground. You can also purchase “There are 4,000 native bee species to North America. Most of them are not social cocoons and place them in the paper tubing where they will nest. and don’t produce honey like honeybees do - honeybees were actually introduced from Bees will emerge from the tubes and Europe in the 1600s,” she said. “Most of pollinate your garden; then it’s hands off our pollination is done by our native bees, until October, Golden said. and they are actually better at pollinating The bees will hibernate in the winter, so than honeybees. The way we use our in the fall, remove the cocoons from the honeybees as commercial pollinators is tubing, get rid of any that have parasites actually a misuse of their skills.” or disease, and then stick them in a The mason bee will pollinate 95 out of refrigerator for safe keeping until the every 100 blossoms it visits, making it very spring. popular with gardeners who have cherry, Bumblebees and many of Oregon’s S T A F F W R IT E R B FINDING HOME, from page 7 weed. I knew something about addiction, because I knew about alcoholism. I was against it. I didn’t know, though, about cocaine.” And now he had all that money. “It sucked me in completely, smoking crack. Your mind and your body loved it. It made the relationship so powerful, the intimacy. I didn’t realize that the drug was part of it and that it wasn’t real. I stopped doing my job the way I had been. I had done my job in order, methodically. I was real and sincere.” But now that he was smoking crack, Joseph starting taking shortcuts, and was always in a hurry to get back to his girlfriend. He quit his job, because he was too ashamed to stay. He had always been proud of his work, but could not do it well as an addict, and the embarrassment was too much. That addiction lasted for more than 20 years, and led to chronic homelessness and eventually heroin. Though Joseph did not have a place of his own, he rarely slept outside. “Wouldn’t ever stay anywhere for more than a week. You lose friends if you stay too long. I wanted them to feel good about me.” But he did not want to hang out downtown: “I have pride.” About addiction he said, “I was lost and confused. Addiction is hiding from everything, blocking everything out, whatever it is, it gets you out of reality.” Rebekah Golden is an educator at Bee Thinking, a beekeeping supply store in Southeast Portland. She said many o f Oregon’s native bees are docile, solitary pollinators that prefer native plants. other native ground-nesting bees require even less maintenance. One of Oregon’s native ground-nesting bees, the mining bee, is so docile that children at Sabin Elementary in Northeast Portland call it the “tickle bee,” and made it their school mascot. Thousands of mining bees make their home at the school, and they earned their nickname because they “tickle” when they touch the students’ skin. To accommodate ground nesters, simply leave a bare patch of loosely packed earth that gets some south or southeastern morning sunlight, Golden said. The trick is to simply leave it alone throughout the year. “You’ll see people who have planter boxes with perfectly manicured and mowed lawns, and it’s really organized and aesthetically pleasing,” Golden said. “Or you could have something that looks just a little more chaotic, and is lived in.” In addition to leaving some bare patches of ground, she recommends planting perennial grasses, which have extensive root systems that make good homes for ground nesting bees. Allowing some weeds to grow will give pollinators a pollen and nectar source when many other flowers aren’t in bloom. lb She also recommends avoiding pesticides, especially neonicotinoids. “There are a lot of different neonicotinoids, and it’s under dozens of names in products you can purchase off any garden store shelf. A lot of people know neonicotinoids are bad, and don’t want to spray them, but then don’t realize that that’s what they are using,” Golden said. “Even some natural pesticides are going to have problems,” she said. “They mostly come from really concentrated plant compounds, but those plants were evolving for thousands of years to combat herbivores, so it’s still very toxic, even though it’s natural.” Throughout evolution, as plants up their toxicity, insects evolve a resistance. “It’s kind of this arms race between the two,” Golden said. “Whereas pollinators have spent thousands of years in a mutualistic relationship with plants, so they don’t have a lot of the same pathways that develop resistances to pesticides or to other plant compounds, so a lot of times they are more susceptible to those toxins than other insects are.” While you will not need a permit from the city to keep mason or ground-nesting bees, you will if you want to have a honeybee hive. You will also be required to notify your neighbors, have a visual barrier and meet a number of other requirements. If you rent, you will need written permission from your landlord. Joseph shoplifted during those years, got caught and went to jail. Eventually he was caught with cocaine and ended up in prison, at Columbia River Correctional Institute. “The first successful help I got was at CODA (a treatment and recovery program in Portland). I only went because I could get out of jail. I want to give credit to the United States Mission here in Portland, too. That program really helped me. “Every time I went to jail, I returned to God. You get a chance to look at yourself and your mind starts to clear out. I started connecting with some of the church that I had learned as a kid. We went to Sunday school - it gave me a foundation. I don’t call myself a Mormon, but I am a Christian. “When I first went to jail in 1996, Marion County Jail had services every night of the week and I was the only guy who went to all of them. I read the Bible from cover to cover.” Joseph’s life story is complicated, with many ups and downs. But now, he has been clean and sober for 18 months, and is in a methadone program. And after waiting for nine months and with the help of Northwest Pilot Project, he is living in his own apartment. He is very clear about the three keys to finding his way out of homelessness: treatment, spirituality and the help you get from others. You can t do it alone!” Joseph pounds on his knee for emphasis. “I wouldn’t be able to be clean now if I hadn’t opened my eyes spiritually and opened up to treatm ent.”