Nourish Magazine Waikato Spring 2020

Page 42

Bee Friendly WORDS LYNDA HALLINAN

Imagine a world without bees; according to some environmental pundits, we’d all be dead within a decade because bees pollinate more than half of our food crops. That is true, to a point. Bees are certainly responsible for pollinating the majority of our most delicious food crops, but traditional staples, such as rice and corn, rely on gusty weather rather than worker bees. While we might have to kiss goodbye to smashed avocado on five-grain toast, there'd be no shortage of bread as wheat, oats, barley and rye are all wind-pollinated. In our gardens, we could still grow lentils and most legumes, as well as leafy green vegetables including spinach, silverbeet and all brassicas (because we eat them before they flower, though saving enough seeds could be compromised). However, our orchards would bear little if any fruit — and even soft fruits that don't rely on bees to fertilise their flowers, such as strawberries, wouldn't taste as sweet. An intriguing study by agroecology researchers at the University of Göttingen in Germany found that strawberries pollinated by bees grew redder, tasted sweeter (the

PAGE 42 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

ideal sugar-acid ratio), were more uniformly shaped and had a longer shelf life than strawberries grown behind an insect barrier without visitation rights for bees. Why? Because strawberries are made up of as many as 200 tiny ovaries stuck together, and when bees pollinate their flowers, those ovaries go into overdrive, producing natural hormones that ripen the flesh around their seeds. What's more, strawberries taste even better when pollinated by a tag-team of wild bees (who work the base of the flower) and honeybees (who tap and gap it from the top of the flower). Even self-fertile crops, such as coffee, benefit from bee activity, producing greater yields of higher quality beans. So, in a world without bees, you could still order your daily espresso, but chances are you couldn't afford it — and if you're plant-based, you'd have to forego any frothy almond milk. As I write this, on a sunny day in the first week of August, the almond grove on the bank below my house is in full bloom. Almonds (Prunus dulcis) are the first to break bud after winter, luring my neighbour's million-plus bees out of their hives to work their magic on those blossoms, one by one.


Articles inside

Events

1min
page 74

Ah Choux

4min
pages 66-69

Made to Order

4min
pages 63-65

Book Review

7min
pages 70-73

Stay a While at Falls Retreat

4min
pages 55-57

Te Koi

5min
pages 58-62

Canapés

2min
pages 52-54

Cheers to Spring

4min
pages 49-51

Bee-autiful Recipes

3min
pages 46-48

Gardening

4min
pages 42-43

Health

7min
pages 38-41

Nutrition

3min
pages 32-33

In Season

3min
pages 30-31

Spring Chicken

5min
pages 26-29

Asparagus

6min
pages 34-37

A Buzzy Experience

4min
pages 44-45

You've Gouda Try These

2min
pages 24-25

Fat Pigeon Recipes

4min
pages 18-19

Piopio’s Fat Pigeon

2min
pages 16-17

Peach on Earth Cake

7min
pages 9-12

News

5min
pages 6-7

Vic’s Picks

2min
page 8

A Decade of Great Recipes

4min
pages 13-15

Meet the Meyers

4min
pages 20-23
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