 |
Stan Bader
MEDIA: Cottonwood bird houses
|
|
In 1995, while visiting the Abiquiu property, a feral bee hive was discovered in the base of an old cottonwood tree. The top of this old dead tree had broken off sometime in the past leaving an unsightly snag that we sawed off to help improve the area’s looks. There for all to see was four perfect combs of stored honey. To save the exposed hive from vermin and winter cold, we nailed a piece of plywood over the stump. Two months later we returned, armed with book knowledge and a newly assembled hive body which started my obsession with bees, honey and wax. The pursuit into the world of the "least among winged things but the most in golden harvest" has resulted in a stable of 10 hives producing from 40 pounds to 100 pounds per
From an accidental start in honeybees and a fascination with their place in the insect world I joined the tour in 2000 to sell the excess honey they produced. In 2001 I had accumulated enough wax to expand into beeswax candles. This year, birdhouses made from cottonwood limbs previously hollowed by woodpeckers was another addition to my tour participation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|