So, you thought that Colony Collapse Disorder, which is causing billions of dollars in losses in American agriculture, was an act of nature? You poor fools! It's a plot, I tell yez. We Australians have hardier bees than you do, so they can carry an infectious disease that your weakly pathetic American bees just can't deal with. And it's no accident that we sent them to you. Now you have to buy our produce! BWAHAHAHAHA!!!!!
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"You put up a candidate and then try to tear it down. And, if you can't tear it down, it's probably bona fide. That's how we do science."
--Ian Lipkin, Columbia University (as quoted in E. Kolbert (6 Aug 07) "Stung," The New Yorker, p. 58)
Bees are dying off to an unusual degree. Although one…
Another update on Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), the surprisingly devastating attack on the honeybee that occurred last year that was responsible for huge losses of bee colonies and a great deal of concern about crops pollinated by this insect.
Originally we mocked the idea that CCD was caused…
As you probably know the 2012 Farm Bill has food stamps on the block. I write a lot about food stamps because they are incredibly important - one in seven Americans uses them. One in four children is on food stamps. When you subsidize food for this many people, you functionally transform the…
Being a bee is hard. I'm speaking specifically of the honey bee, Apis mellifera, the one that produces the honey you buy in the store. Many insects, and other critters, eat by finding food and then eating it, and then they do that for a while and now and then reproduce by finding a mate, laying…
I do buy your apples during (our) summer. Also apples from New Zealand. Our markets sell US grown apples them, but they have been in cold storage for months and are not so yummy.
When I first read your headline I thought it said that Australian beers are better than American beers, and as a proud supporter of Oregon and Washington breweries I was ready to take offense.
Sure, I'll happily eat your produce, but the day I have to trade in my Bridgeport or Deschutes for Fosters I'm expatriating to Belgium.
I keep trying to tell people. The reason we export Fosters is so we don't have to drink that crap.
True story - I used to work next door to the maltery that made the hops used in Fosters. Twenty five years later just the thought of that place brings the smell to my nose. I still hate it.
Hops are not made they are grown, and this from a man who write about biology!
You know, at one time this may have been a recipe for famine or disaster here. Hurray global economy!
I know they're grown. Due to a bit of weasel wording in the local legislation of the time, we used to graft marijuana plants onto hops vines to evade prosecution (they changed it pretty quickly).
But they roast it, or do something equally evil, and the smell is pernicious.
What they roast in a maltery is barley to make malt which is what gives beer and whisky their colour and some of their flavour. I will however agree that the smell is pernicious although for me it awakes fond memories.
Also true story - I grew up in a small East Anglian village which boasted a splendid Edwardian maltings next to the railway station, about a mile and a half outside of the village. (Ben Trumans if there are any East Anglian beer experts reading this) The smell when they roasted the barley was as you say pernicious but it is a smell that evokes the care free days of my childhood so for me it is a positive and not a negative memory that is stirred.
Wiki has just informed me that Ben Trumans is not an East Anglian beer but a London one!
Your bees or not your bees, *that* is the question!
Damn, you are right. The term "maltery" should have given it away. I blame the drugs I was on at the time.
I was a technical proofreader in a small enclosed office next door, and the smell pervaded everything. Not pleasant memories at all.
Come up with a good bee vaccine and our bees can all play together, as one big happy colony.