30-04-2014 08:45 PM - edited 30-04-2014 08:47 PM
A Queensland beekeeper's club has become the latest to be stung by hive hustlers keen to capitalise on increasing honey prices.
Not even the threat of 240,000 bees put off the sticky-handed bandits who reportedly stole 12 hives containing more than 480kg of honey.
That's probably because the rewards are sweet, with the haul potentially netting almost $2000 as wholesale honey prices reach $4 a kilogram, the highest in years, due to harsh weather conditions wreaking havoc on production.
The alleged theft has devastated the Ipswich & West Moreton Beekeepers' Association which uses its honey for charitable pursuits, although president Benita Ironside says the crime isn't uncommon.
"The honey's worth the money," she said.
Ms Ironside said the hives, stolen from a private property near Ipswich, west of Brisbane, last week each contained between 40kg and 60kg of honey and some 20,000 to 30,000 bees.
Australian Honey Bee Industry Council executive director Trevor Weatherhead speculated part-time beekeepers with a ute were likely behind the crime.
Mr Weatherhead said the threat of hive theft was a concern for Australian beekeepers already stung by less than ideal production conditions.
Hot weather combined with drought and bushfires were likely to halve Australia's annual honey production to 14,000 tonnes this year, he said.
"You get these grubs who do this sort of thing," he said, adding many beekeepers were insured against theft.
"You definitely worry, you don't want to lose your income."
One Queensland beekeeper lost a lot more than his income over honey.
In 2007, Sunshine Coast man Tony Knight was fatally shot as he slept by fellow beekeeper Donald Robert Alcock, who wanted to steal his honey.
Alcock is serving a life sentence for the murder.
Sticky-handed bandits, haw haw. Reporters love nothing more than a pun, do they?
But really, I didn't realise that honey was such a valuable commodity. It takes me nearly a year to go through the smallest jar of honey I can buy. And that's only to make honey-glazed carrots!
Wouldn't you hate getting your bees pinched! ![]()
on 01-05-2014 02:50 PM
they cast a donkey vote as to would bee the arresting officer.
But then decided they'd all swarm the neighborhood and Be keeping an eye out.
on 01-05-2014 02:59 PM
on 01-05-2014 03:15 PM
@electric*mayhem*band wrote:
@*jimmy1717* wrote:
But then decided they'd all swarm the neighborhood and Be keeping an eye out.
Aw buzz off, Jimmy.
Sorry, I didn't mean to Drone on!
01-05-2014 10:39 PM - edited 01-05-2014 10:41 PM
Good luck to them... Beekeeping isn't as simple as just buying a hive and some bees and sticking it in your backyard...
There are a lot of diseases that can infect hives and kill bees really quickly; there is also the problem of "robbing" Robbing is a situation in which a beehive is attacked by invaders from other hives.
It also helps to have a honey spinner to extract the honey from the comb.. Oh and you actually have to feed them, they don't live off pollen
on 02-05-2014 09:44 AM
We have bee keepers bring their hives here when the macadamias are flowering, buzzz buzzz, they can be quite loud lol.
I sometimes swap plants for honey...yummmmm. but I do have to remember to have the car windows shut when I'm driving up my road !
on 02-05-2014 10:46 AM
@patchoo78 wrote:Good luck to them... Beekeeping isn't as simple as just buying a hive and some bees and sticking it in your backyard...
There are a lot of diseases that can infect hives and kill bees really quickly; there is also the problem of "robbing" Robbing is a situation in which a beehive is attacked by invaders from other hives.
It also helps to have a honey spinner to extract the honey from the comb.. Oh and you actually have to feed them, they don't live off pollen
What do they live off then?
02-05-2014 05:00 PM - edited 02-05-2014 05:04 PM
on 02-05-2014 05:07 PM
on 02-05-2014 08:26 PM
Well there ya go.
Never thought about the production of honey in such depth.