CHARLESTON — The buzz around Marshall University next week will be about the importance of honeybees.
Even those dreaded stingers.
About 300 beekeepers will join 12 vendors and dozens more presenters at the Heartland Apiculture Society’s annual conference starting Thursday in Huntington.
Anyone can attend. But will the public show up knowing the flying critter’s reputation for scattering picnics and scaring the ’bee’-jeezus out of people who are allergic to their stings?
Speakers will educate conference attendees about bees and stress their importance. State apiarist George Clutter will wear his work on his face — he’ll show others how to make a bee beard on Thursday and Friday. His presentation will take place outdoors.
“People really have become very much aware of the importance of the honeybee in the last two to three years and the problems we may face if we don’t bring them back,” said Gabe Blatt of Huntington, president of the Heartland Apiculture Society.
“About one out of every three bites of food that we eat are a direct result of pollination,” Blatt said. “If that goes away, we’ve got a problem. And people are beginning to realize that.”
Nationally, the number of honey-producing colonies has dropped from 5 million in the 1940s to 2.5 million now, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. There are many reasons, including the arrival of two parasitic mites in the United States starting in the mid-1980s, Blatt said.
Clutter said there currently are 20,000 colonies in West Virginia, up from less than 2,000 in 1995.
Though West Virginia has seen no signs of colony collapse disorder, there will be an update on the mysterious disappearance of entire bee colonies that has been reported in at least 35 states since 2006.
Ice cream maker Haagen-Dazs is among the companies that have pledged money for research and begun efforts to help save the bees. The problem affects about 40 percent of Haagen-Dazs’ 73 flavors, including banana split and chocolate peanut butter, because ingredients such as almonds, cherries and strawberries rely on honeybees for pollination.
Jerry Hayes of the Florida Department of Agriculture’s Bureau of Plant Inspection is scheduled to give an update on so-called Africanized bees, a fierce hybrid strain sometimes referred to as “killer bees” that began heading north from Brazil in 1957 after a swarm escaped a lab.
Blatt also is hoping to locate a speaker about apitherapy, the use of bee venom by thousands of arthritis sufferers, multiple sclerosis patients and others.
Blatt has been using apitherapy for about eight months for his arthritic left wrist. He’s known about the medically unproven and possibly dangerous method for a long time. The chemicals in bee venom are thought to reduce inflammation.
Blatt takes a live bee and lets it sting him about once a month. His wife also uses the therapy for arthritis in a big toe.
“My arthritis wasn’t that bad until it started flaring up. So I decided to try it out and see what happens. It cleared it right up,” Blatt said. “It does work. It has to be in the right spot. I can get stung in other places and it doesn’t quite work.”
For him, the relief far outweighs the short-term pain.
“Oh, it hurts,” Blatt said. “But it’s not that bad.”
He numbs the area with ice beforehand, then lets the bee do the dirty deed.
“For me, the next day I can tell the difference,” Blatt said. “It will vary from person to person. And I’m sure there are people it won’t work for. It’s like any medicine. It doesn’t work for everybody, but it works for a good number of folks.”
Local News
UPDATE — Beekeepers coming to Marshall for conference
- Local News
-
-
Pepperoni roll prize
To someone from out of state, the pepperoni roll might seem like a mystery.
“Is it like a calzone?” they might ask, “or a stromboli?”
Unique to the state of West Virginia, the pepperoni roll represents the Italian heritage of many of the miners in the early 20th century mixed with hardworking Mountaineer common sense. -
BOE seeks land for new middle schools
The Marion County Board of Education is looking at land to build new middle schools in Mannington and Monongah.
If all goes as planned, county voters will see a bond on the November ballot. -
Former WVU coach takes final journey home
Bill Stewart has made his way back home.
The former West Virginia University football coach, who died suddenly earlier this week of a heart attack at 59, was laid to rest Friday in his hometown of New Martinsville. -
Bickerstaff ready to make mark as Woman’s Club president
One look at a facility can show Nancy Bickerstaff a lot.
Attention to detail has always been her strong point, and when she first walked into the Woman’s Club mansion more than four years ago, she immediately knew what the priorities should be. -
Funeral today for former WVU football coach Bill Stewart
Former West Virginia University football coach Bill Stewart is heading home to New Martinsville for the last time.
-
Tears and memories: VIDEO
It was mid-Thursday afternoon at the Morgantown Event Center and the crowd stood mostly silently in line that wound out of the Events Hall and into the hallway toward the staircase.
A young lady was there holding a singular golden rose
“I wish,” Rebecca Durst said, “it could be gold and blue.” -
‘Dangerous fugitive’ is apprehended
Two more targets of “Operation Blue Haze” were apprehended by U.S. Marshals and local police Thursday.
Bryan Keith Egress, 28, described by United States Marshals as a “dangerous fugitive,” was arrested around midnight Thursday at 1410 Miller St., Fairmont, the residence of his girlfriend. -
Excitement marks Three Rivers Festival
It was 5:55 p.m. Thursday on Merchant Street. Kids ran up and down the sidewalks, as their older siblings strolled along the side of the street. Waiting.
There was a certain energy in the air. An expectation. -
Spring paving under way
Some folks in the Friendly City are seeing a fresh coat of asphalt go down on the street in front of their homes.
City Manager Jay Rogers said Fairmont’s spring paving project will resurface two blocks of Gaston, Virginia and Minor avenues, as well as Moore Place from 12th Street to 14th Street. -
Fairmont Catholic’s Arts Festival popular event
Students at Fairmont Catholic were not lined up in their respective rows or seats on Thursday morning.
Some were dancing in a classroom, attempting to follow the lead of Shawna Gerau-Santee, owner of the Fifth Street Dance Co. - More Local News Headlines
-

