

Archive for May, 2008
Honeybees on strike?
Author: Callie

Honeybee Colony Collapse to Devastate Food Companies, Result in Food Scarcity
Monday, May 12, 2008 by: Mike Adams
(NaturalNews) The ongoing phenomenon of mysterious honeybee deaths is starting to raise alarm in the food industry, which depends heavily on bees to pollinate many critical crops. “Honeybee health and sustainable pollination is a major issue facing American agriculture that is threatening our food supply and endangering our natural environment,” said Diana Cox-Foster of Penn State.
I tend to think that honeybees are simply “on strike.” They’re tired of being slave workers for the very humans who continue to destroy their habitat, pollute their air and water, and steal the labors of their hard work (honey, bee pollen and free pollination services).
Honeybees pollinate 130 different crops, which supply $15 billion worth of food and ingredients each year. One out of every three bites of food on your dinner plate was made possible by honeybee pollination.
The Emergence of Colony Collapse Disorder
In late 2006, beekeepers in the United States began to notice that unusual numbers of honeybees were dying during the winter. Beekeepers reported losing between 30 and 90 percent of their bees, in contrast to the usual 20 to 25 percent.
The phenomenon, which continued through last winter, remains unexplained. Some of the potential reasons being investigated for the honeybee die-off are poor nutrition, invasive mites, diseases or toxins, air pollution, or a mysterious phenomenon known as colony collapse disorder, in which bees abruptly desert their hives and die (i.e. they go on strike). In general, human beings have a very poor appreciation of all the services “provided” by Mother Nature, including the removal of CO2 from the air by plants, the turning of soil by worms, and of course the free pollination of crops and orchards by honeybees and other insects.
While the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and a number of institutions are currently researching the causes of the die-off, the food industry is now entering the fray. International ice-cream giant Haagen-Dazs has announced a new program to fund and encourage research into the problem, with the hopes of staving off a crisis for its own business.
“Haagen-Dazs ice cream is made from the finest all-natural ingredients, and the plight of the honeybee could mean many of the ingredients used in our top flavors, like Vanilla Swiss Almond and Strawberry, would be difficult to source,” said Haagen-Dazs brand manager Josh Gellert.
Nearly 40 percent of Haagen-Dazs’ ice cream flavors include bee-dependent ingredients. “These are among consumers’ favorite flavors,” brand director Katty Pien said. “We use 100 percent all-natural ingredients like strawberries, raspberries and almonds which we get from California. The bee problem could badly hurt supply.”
The “Haagen-Dazs Loves Honeybees” (HD loves HB) campaign includes the creation of a board of bee scientists to help guide research into the problem, a $150,000 grant to honeybee-related programs at Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences and a $100,000 grant to the Harry H. Laidlaw Jr. Honeybee Research Facility at the University of California-Davis
“Honeybees are in trouble,” said Walter Leal, professor chair of the UC-Davis Entomology Department. “One-third of our nation’s food supply depends on bee pollination, but bees are vanishing in massive numbers. This gift will help us to rebuild and revitalize our honeybee program.”
To continue reading: Natural News
read comments (0)Squirrel massage
Author: Callie
I received this lovely picture in a “stress-free” email funny this morning … I can just imagine that is what our squirrels get up to when we aren’t in the garden!

Who’s to say that they don’t enjoy a good therapeutic treatment as well as us humans?!
Invisable Illness & International ME Awareness Day 12th May
Author: Callie
Too many times with an Invisible Illness people look through us, treat us like we don’t exist. This site is set up so people KNOW that we are NOT invisible, but we are “ABLE”.
Do go along and have a read of the Invisable Illness website, set up by a wonderful, truly inspirational lady:
Lots of very interesting articles on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Fibromyalgia to name but two … so what are you waiting for? Go read!!!!!!
Still here? Well, that’s great news actually … because I also wanted to use this post to advertise that next Monday, 12th May 2008, is International ME Awareness Day. If you are based in the UK, please go along to visit our Invest In ME site where they are hosting lots of events in May, including their International Conference in London, England.
A spa where you bathe in chocolate?
Author: Callie
The traditional practice of communal bathing in Japan is updated at the Yunessun Spa near Tokyo, with a variety of unusual elements added right into the water – including chocolate and coffee!
To watch the video: Chocolate spa
Sounds like Callie’s idea of heaven!!! How about you?
Scales used by patients to be checked
Author: Callie
Hospitals, surgeries and nursing homes have been told to check the scales that they use to weigh patients, because of fears that defective ones could cause errors in medication (David Rose writes).
The Government has issued a warning that patients could be given the wrong doses of drugs if their weight is calculated inaccurately.
In February it emerged that NHS staff had used defective bathroom scales to weigh a four-year-old cancer patient to calculate her radiation dosage.
In her case, the error was spotted in time. But trading standards officers began a national medical weighing project last month after many hospital scales were found to be inaccurate. They also found that staff did not have access to the right scales for specific tasks.
Officers will check that all weighing equipment is accurate and legal, focusing particularly on cancer and children’s departments. They will also ensure that staff are properly trained. The Department of Health said that all scales used in healthcare settings must be checked by the middle of next month.
May 3, 2008 – (c) The Times



