Bees and Beekeepers
(Work in Progress)

Curated with the help of Aliyah Dominguez.

No bee-suit, no protective-wear — swarms of anxious and curious honey bees side-swiped my face and arms while I photographed; I was an imposing figure! Although, besides the occasional-landings on my face, the bees ignored me — no stings! Bill is the beekeeper in these images, his experience in beekeeping is extensive and fascinating; photographing and interviewing him was insightful to say the least! “Bees and Beekeepers,” is an on-going photo-essay and presentation concerning the ecological issues affecting the bee-population. And as Bill addressed it: planting pollinator plants isn’t enough anymore, we will need to become beekeepers to save the bees. I hope this photo-essay adds to the concerned-efforts of “Save the Bees,” and I hope to present this work to my community as passionate as Bill and other beekeepers are with bees and beekeeping.

    Close to 1/3rd of our food comes from bee-pollination: apples, almonds, avocados, cherries, peaches, peppermints, sugarcanes, tomatoes, vanilla – I’ll keep going: apricots. pears, mangos, blueberries, cranberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, papayas, pumpkins, sesames, nutmegs, melons, grapefruits, grapes, coffees, chocolates and much more! To give some perspective: bee colonies are transported across the U.S’ agricultural-land to help mass-pollinate our foods; close to 90% of the US’ honey bees are transported to California’s almond orchards; and California produces 80% of the world's almonds. Adding on, in the U.S,  the demand for honey bee pollination is increasingly exceeding the amounts of honey bee colonies we have, and to make matters worse, the honey bees are dying, at an alarming rate – pollution, pesticides, and the varroa-mites are killing our bees.


Who are you and where did you grow up?

My name is Bill Perkins, I moved to Boston about 30 years ago. I grew up in Pennsylvania for about 12-14 years of my life; my family was there, so I kept going back. I’ve spent time in Washington D.C – and Massachusetts as a young man. As well as Venezuela for a few years, and 6-months in Indonesia.

How did you get into beekeeping and how many hives do you have?

I have probably about 12 hives, some are big and some are small. I'm able to collect honey from about 7 hives currently, and 10 by winter. I got into beekeeping somewhat by accident; I had opened up this shop in Boston, providing people with an opportunity to learn about different types of farming. It was called agricultural-home  it was a place where people can find the resources and supply needed to explore farming or agriculture in an urban-setting.  

As a young boy, there was a tree next to our house that was covered with bees for most of the summer, and I used to go out and catch them in a jar, I would watch them and then let them go  they never bothered me, and I sort-of got fascinated by them that way, so maybe it all started there.




Leading on from the last question – how long have you been doing this for?  

Before I moved back to Venezuela in ‘77, I had set up a beehive at my sister’s house, which was before the very destructive Varroa-Mites appeared on the scene. You could have literally set-up a bee-hive  walk away and come back later to get some honey. So I was a very passive beekeeper — if you could have even called me a bee-keeper then. 
But eventually, I moved out the area where my sister lived, I would later set-up a hive at my mother’s house…which was maybe…30 years ago  it never really worked out…a little bit  but I didn’t have a mentor, I didn’t listen to any research, or anything, so I didn’t really become a beekeeper until about 10 years ago when I opened up the shop and started keeping bees because I had to – I was providing supplies and bees to people and I had to know what I was talking about.





What sense of enjoyment or fulfillment do you get from beekeeping?  

Just being outside, I enjoy working with other people, seeing other people, and offering help. I enjoy being in nature and the zen of a beehive  you can really get lost into it, if not frustrating.  

Are there any challenges to beekeeping and are you facing any currently? 

In-regards to beekeeping in general, it is really the mites that are the biggest challenge – for everybody – and time management; I keep them in different farms and I love doing that, but it also means, that I'm going to one place for one or two beehives  pulling out all my equipment, doing all the inspections, closing up and doing it all again somewhere else. It’s not very time-efficient.

What are some beekeeping challenges you might face in an urban environment vs. a rural environment? 

Swarming is a big one, your neighbors  you’re in a tighter space, and so you’re more out to have people encounter your bees, whether they’re just curiously walking by, or having one of the gardener’s complain about the bees, and having to move the hive.





What has your experience been in beekeeping and what have you learned?  

I feel like I’m getting better and better all of the time; the experience in the beginning was frustrating but I’m feeling more and more confident.  

Do you have any advice for those that are thinking/just getting into beekeeping? 

Take a class, join a club, find a mentor, and read more on beekeeping, careful of the rabbit-hole which is the internet and Tik-Tok. It’s good to learn and focus on practical things.






Are there ways we as the general public can help the bees?  

I think just by beekeeping really, because the only way they're going to survive at the moment is by people keeping them and treating them for Varroa, because the bees still haven’t develop any kind of self-defenses against them  there are people working on it  we’re having a lecture about this next Thursday…they're going to tell us if there's any hope. 

If I lived near a beekeeper, would letting the weeds grow (dandelions and milk-weeds,) and planting pollinator plants and native wild-flowers act as a lending hand?  

Having a pollinator garden helps the bees  to a point, but bees get most of their nectar from trees. Around here, the big nectar producers are willow, locust, and linden trees  there are few flowers in a garden, but when you see a tree, it blooms a 3-dimensional column of flowers and it’s just full  in so many ways trees are where it’s at. But, what’s important about wild-flowers is that it remains as a resource for bees to collect when the trees aren’t blooming – trees usually finish pretty quickly and for that reason, pollinator gardens/wild-flowers are necessary to fill in those gaps in-between the repose periods after heavy nectar flow.