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Colony Collapse Disorder – Bees

by Tricia

Colony Collapse Disorder is the latest, and what seems to be the most serious die-off of honey bees colonies across the country and even the world.

It is characterized by sudden colony death.

It is also characterized by a slower than normal invasion by common pests such as wax moths and hive beetles

Duration : 0:3:2

[youtube O13fV0AcZlY]







Filed Under: organic insecticide Tagged With: bees, CCD, Cell, Closer, collapse, Colony, disorder, GMO, Heart, Honeybee, McGowan, organic, pesticide, Phone, Rush, the, to, Varroa

Comments

  1. ENOSONER says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    BAN EXPERIMENTAL …
    BAN EXPERIMENTAL PESTICIDES from bayer cropscience and other pesticide companies they are using chemical warfare to kill insects (BEES)

  2. CORP7USA7IS7BK says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    we need to tear …
    we need to tear that nasty off the top of the capital building!!

  3. bobviously says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Bees have been …
    Bees have been oversized to produce more honey. They have also been protected unnaturally by fungicides and pesticides, and aren’t protecting themselves the way nature intended. The pesticides build up in the wax being used many times over, so that the reused wax is harmful to them. The bees’ size should be regressed back to the size that feral bees are, so that they can protect themselves from mites naturally. The answer is to return them to the way nature intended them to be.

  4. statwhite says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Ive been thinking …
    Ive been thinking about the chemtrail thing Im glad somebody else is saying about that I could see a correlation between the spread of chemtrails and decline of bees. Maybe more should be done to establish what these chemtrails contain Ive seena study but not alot more

  5. LechonAtomico says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    I love this SONG! …
    I love this SONG! I love “RUSH”

  6. naturesflame13 says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Thank you for …
    Thank you for putting this together and sharing! There is NOT enough attention given to many points you made…hear me applauding???

  7. therealreadyhere1 says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    maybe it has …
    maybe it has something to do with the chem trails?or the haarps program fallout>actually i think they are connected personall..

  8. pba11 says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    About making rats …
    About making rats sick – ummmm – I have a hard time working myself up about that other than rats are part of the food chain. If the crops are really making rats sick due to the genetic insert, I want to know what it is. Market it as RAT POISON.

    Cows – now that is bad. (Ok there’s gonna be one ratty person out there that is going to be upset – but I was terrorized by rats as a child and I still hate them!)

  9. pba11 says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    My bigger fear (not …
    My bigger fear (not that I’m not worried about bees – I AM) is that Monsanto will get farmers hooked on intensive farming that requires MORE toxins. First they sell the GM crop, then they sell the hydrocarbon based toxin to kill everything but the GM crop. Monsanto makes a fortune. People poison their environment further.

    But India might benefit from drought toleranct crops in areas with destroyed soils due to high salt – the result of bad irrigation practices.

  10. pba11 says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    What about India? …
    What about India? Monsanto, BT cotton and suicidal farmers? (I always said that would NEVER work).

    Most GM plants have one or at most a few introduced genes. There is concern about increased antibiotic resistance, or some sort of protein that causes allergy being introduced into a new food source, but I’m unsure that there is much (any) evidence that GM plants kill bees (though I’m not saying it’s not possible – just unlikely).

  11. DoJaenin says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    hehe – yes, that’s …
    hehe – yes, that’s also possible. However, GM crops have seemingly been making rats and cows sick too. And unfortunately these plants often need the most toxin because they’re so overbred. Take India, for example…

  12. pba11 says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Maybe the countries …
    Maybe the countries that use GM crops have the most advanced horticultural techniquest that include spraying crops with shitheaps of toxins. I’d look more for toxins than at GMOs. Yeah, I was a freaky gene jockey for years – I’ve still not sprung two heads.

  13. KelleyMcGowan says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Thanks for your …
    Thanks for your advice. Always appreciated on any of my videos. The more I read about GMO’s the bigger the connection seems to be. pajo2012 raised an interesting point as well

  14. KelleyMcGowan says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Thanks for your …
    Thanks for your comments. I read up a little on top bar hives. Very interesting indeed

  15. DoJaenin says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    2 pieces of humble …
    2 pieces of humble advice: 1. The writing isn’t visible long enough and 2. maybe it would be better if you put that link into the description instead.
    It’s really interesting how the bees start disappearing in the country that plants the most GM crops worldwide. Maybe they’re withdrawing their support…

  16. pajo2012 says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Great video, an …
    Great video, an interesting parallal can be drawn between modern factory farming and modern beekeeping…Natural “top bar hives” seem to be the answer.

  17. KelleyMcGowan says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Fact: Research …
    Fact: Research Biologists at Princeton & Entomologists from Penn State were talking about this issue 4 years ago in an article in Nat’l Georgraphic. It could just be “our science” (GMO) that is contributing to this epidemic. One thing is for certain, we must demand answers. Unfortunately, this is not a media fabrication.Please educate yourself further and take care!

  18. Migsoon says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    What happened …
    What happened between last year and this one? No bee problem last year anywhere. Better start working on someone that is closer to the TRUTH than to the heart.

    Missing bees? With our science, don’t you think someone knows what’s causing this IF it’s a big deal?
    Just more trivia to fill the media with more “scared Ya THIS time” stuff.

  19. KelleyMcGowan says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Thanks for your …
    Thanks for your comment Lovuian

  20. KelleyMcGowan says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    You pose an …
    You pose an interesting question..It’s totally bizarre.

  21. lovuian says

    September 25, 2008 at 2:27 am

    Great job Kelly
    Great job Kelly

  22. Bill Rawleigh says

    December 30, 2009 at 7:54 pm

    Did I hear someone say “top bar hive”? I started building top bar hives because I felt it was a way that I could personally do something to help. If you would like to keep bees in a natural and sustainable way, visit our site at thegardenhive.com. It’s about a lot more than bee hives.

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