Bees for Development Journal Edition 56 - September 2000

Page 10

EVIS HOSTS

THE SECOND CARIBBEAN BEEKEEPING CONGRESS .ycive

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The first Caribbean Beekeeping Congress was held in Tobago in 1998. In August 2000 it was the turn of the Island of Nevis to welcome over 50 participants to the Second Congress, with the theme ‘Expanding the Horizons for Caribbean Beekeepers’ Delegates were welcomed by Nevis Premier Vance Amory who told them that honey production could become a world-class income earner for the region: “We are being forced to place

emphasis on the development of agriculture and the sub-sectors within to ensure that we remain outside of the poverty a greater

circle” he said.

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Participants at the Congress

During the five days of the Congress, papers were presented on: marketing, Africanized honeybees, stingless bees, pests and

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Nevis, St Lucia, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, as well as Finland, The Netherlands, UK, USA and Venezuela.

Vincent Weekes uncapping the drone brood to find Varroa (top-bar hive)

“tn the Caribbean, the days when sugar was king, bananas were

profitable and cotton was a major crop, are mostly gone. Today the Island economies feed on tourism, off-shore financial institutions

and other service businesses. It will not replace any of the crops but beekeeping offers tremendous potential,” said Mr Bailey.

Gladstone Solomon, President of Tobago Apicultural Society and a driving force in organising Caribbean beekeepers,

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told the meeting that the Caribbean

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currently produces about 7,000 tonnes of multifloral honey with an exotic taste

and a romantic aura, most of which is

consumed in the region.

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Laurence Cutts, Quentin Henderson

Junior Minster Livingstone Herbert praised beekeeper Quentin Henderson. “It would

and Vincent Weekes inspecting 5ees ina top-bar hive

be remiss of me in lauding the success story of the Nevis Beekeepers’

Society Cooperative Ltd (now

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members strong), if failed to pay |

tribute to the man who | perceive to be the heartbeat of that society

and certainly the heart beat of beekeeping in Nevis,” he said,

“the

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A Congress Resolution called upon Caribbean Governments to collectively impose immediate restrictions on the importation of queen bees and honey in order to minimise the spread of pests and diseases.

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diseases, Varroa control and food safety. Participants came from many Caribbean islands: Antigua, Bermuda, Dominica, Jamaica,

government and people of Nevis truly appreciate his work.”

During post-Congress apiary inspections Varroa was identified in every apiary visited. We concluded that the mite had probably arrived since a survey in 1998 declared Nevis free of brood disease and Varroa. Nevisian beekeepers now have to learn how to assist their bees to cope with Varroa.

The Congress Proceedings are now in preparation - read B&D for more information and details of the next Congress. Proceedings of the First Caribbean Congress reviewed in B&D 54 are available from Bees for Development price 30.

PHOTOGRAPHS

@ Beekeeping & Development 56

Clive de Bruyn


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