Tag: honey

  • The Urban Bee Patrol

    The Urban Bee Patrol

    The concrete walls and trees groomed every season, are sometimes home to bees with honeycombs. Tens of thousands of bees find shelter in ventilation openings, in the attics of numerous houses, including heritage buildings, in hospitals, embassies, ministries, parks and cemeteries.

     

    Emergency services call centers receive, every week, requests for help from people who want to get rid of these insects. That is why the Urban Bee Patrol was established, a group of volunteer beekeepers who protect people from bees and bees from people. The Bee Patrol is an interface between citizens and beekeepers, prepared to intervene and extract swarms of unwanted bees or those that settle in inappropriate places in the city, some of them quite unusual, as Marian Pătraşcu, the founder of the Patrol, explains: ʺEvery situation, even if they look identical, has a particularity. As a rule, they sit on a low branch, but they also sit on high branches. For instance, our assistance was requested at the National Cathedral, where there are three rings that adorn the building at a height of 50m, and the workers noticed at least three bee colonies. We could only come and note their presence there. We couldn’t break the walls and we let them live there because we are beekeepers, we work with bees and we don’t kill them. They are harmless. Also, there are many bee families in the Parliament building, they work there tirelessly. In a block on the Victory Boulevard, the central honeycomb was 1.80m high, as it had been there for at least 5 years. They hadn’t bothered anyone. In an abandoned house in Plumbuita, 20 honeycombs. Somewhere near Bucharest, in a broken window, about 100kg of honey in honeycombs. It is a shame that these values ​​are lost, that they are not capitalized on!ʺ

     

    Paradoxically, bees live happier in Bucharest, with its suffocating traffic, because they have cleaner food than the bees in the countryside. That is because urban green spaces, as few as there are, are not poisoned with pesticides or herbicides. “The urban environment has become very friendly for bee families. Here, they constantly find a source of food, nectar, they have flowers constantly, in parks, in squares, in all floral arrangements that are constantly changed and watered from spring until late autumn”, says Marian Pătraşcu: “In the big cities, the bees do extremely well, because the authorities ensure a permanently blooming environment, the flowers are changed, they are watered, even if we don’t have precipitation, which is no longer the case in rural areas. We even say it every time we are called for intervention, that the urban environment has become a heaven for bees, compared to the rural environment, where flowers are extremely limited, exposed to excessive weeding, drought, climate change – all these have contributed to poor conditions in the rural environment, and the urban one is an alternative.ʺ

     

    The Urban Bee Patrol, through its founder, urges the citizens of Bucharest not to try to drive away the bees by themselves, but to ask for help: ʺThey must notify the authorities. We have been active in Bucharest, the Ilfov county and beyond for six years. We have this website where we tried to show people that it is something normal. Bees can be our friends and we must act as such. Without them there is no life. Well, it’s simple – notify the authorities, a beekeeper or directly the emergency service 112, who call us and we know what we have to do. During the swarming period, there is an average 30-40 situations reported daily, and during the peak period, we receive up to 100 calls in Bucharest and Ilfov county alone. Almost all are solved. For us, the primary thing is not to endanger the lives of the citizens or of the beekeepers who intervene. Surely bees can settle in another place. Do we have any knowledge of them ever becoming dangerous? We do not. They only created problems when people bothered them.”

     

    The honey produced by the bees in the Capital could become a brand of the city. Marian Pătrașcu: ʺ Even Herodotus said that, in this area beyond the Danube, one could not enter due to the multitude bee swarms. Let’s not forget that, for hundreds of years, tribute was given in honey, wax and other products. Three out of five houses had beehives in the garden. However, in the past 30 years, there has been this amplified fear of bees, which, in our opinion, is unjustified, and, I repeat, we must behave normally, as they are part of our life and we must learn to live with them.ʺ

     

    A client of the Urban Bee Patrol tasted the “wild” honey from Bucharest and said that, apart from being lighter in cooler than the one we all know, it is very, very good!

  • Tourist assets in Buzau county

    Tourist assets in Buzau county

    Buzau County is renowned because of its
    tourist assets, but mostly because of its wine cellars. Slow Food Travel offers
    a new model of tourism, made of encounters with farmers, cheese makers,
    shepherds, bakers and vine growers who, jointly with the cooks who cook their
    produce, will be the narrators of their local areas and sole guides for the
    local traditions. Our guide for today’s journey is Thorsten Kirschner, a founding
    member of Buzau Slow Food Community, the realm of legends and savors. Thorsten
    arrived in Romania 13 years ago. He spent two years in Bucharest, then he
    retired to Buzau. There he bought a mansion and founded an association
    promoting traditional craft produce.

    Thorsten Kirschner:

    Slow food is a global
    movement that has been gaining ground in more than 160 countries, providing
    access to healthy food. It is an alternative to fast-food, created in Italy in
    the 1980s. As we speak, it is very active in Transylvania, in Brasov, Sibiu, Cluj, and Buzău. We’re more like an NGO, bringing
    together farmers, food producers, agro-tourism guesthouses, restaurants and
    lovers of healthy and sustainable food. The idea we have come up with what that
    of creating a platform for the promotion of craft products, of the quality food
    in Buzau County. To give you an example of that, we have a honey producer with
    an innovative technology. He mixes fresh fruit into the honey and creates a new
    produce you can have for breakfast. Tourists
    can also find the produce in the souvenir shop and can thus go back home with
    something new. Furthermore, we also have craft beer. We have a young entrepreneur
    who started up with mead. It is a honey-based beverage, with a low percentage of
    alcohol.


    The Buzau Land Geopark has
    been a UNESCO site since 2022. It comprises 18 communes, with 40,000 inhabitants
    and lots of tourist assets, one-of-a-kind around the world. As for the visit to
    the tourist assets, that can be combined with gastronomic experiences, says the
    founding member of Slow Food Community Buzău, Thorsten
    Kirschner.


    For instance, the tourist
    arrives in the commune of Berca and finds himself in front of the tourist info
    center. There he can find out what he can visit in the Buzau land. He can go to the Muddy Volcanoes or to the cave
    settlements in Bozioru and after that, the tourist can have a stopover at a guesthouse,
    a restaurant or a local producer where he can have a tasting of this and that. We
    for instance, offer cheese tasting as well. We make goat cheese made of raw
    milk, which best goes with a Dealu mare sort of wine, for tasting. It is a network,
    basically. We do not promote our products alone. Also, in the area we have growers
    of bio wine. You can go to them, you can visit their cellars, you can see for
    yourself how the wine is made and then a tasting follows, of three wine sorts. Another
    event we stage in Buzău is the truffle hunting. We go into the forest with
    specially trained dogs, we look for truffles, and, on our way back, we have an
    all-truffle tasting menu.


    Slow Food Buzău targets
    anxious and responsible travellers who are eager to know for real the Buzau
    area’s local cuisine culture, without overlooking food sustainability and
    biodiversity. For instance, after one such trip, you can get to know the Babik
    and its story. It is a spicy salami, presented as one of the best salamis according
    to the TasteAtlas, and being 15th-placed according
    to a world ranking. You can also find the
    babik on a traditional produce map, created by Thorsten
    Kirschner.


    You can access our platform at slowfoodbuzau.com, in Romanian and
    English. There you can get all the info on local producers, restaurants and tourist
    guesthouses, in Romanian and English. You can find all the info you need about
    local producers, about restaurants and tourist guesthouses that are part of our
    network. We also have a visiting hours schedule. Our work on the platform is
    still in progress and we hope that, until the nest season, in 2024, we can have
    a much more generous offer.


    An event in the area has come to an end, recently.
    It was a celebration of good food, being also an excellent opportunity to socialize,
    for the participants. Also presented as part of the event were the most recent
    rural and adventure tourism offers.

    Thorsten Kirschner:

    We staged the third edition
    of the events titled the Craftsmen’s Market. It is an innovative concept, by
    means of which we get the consumer come closer to the farmers and the local
    food producers in the Buzau Land UNESCO Geopark
    It is Romania’s first such project by means of which the small local producers
    and tourism services providers collaborate, in a bid to create such a fair. For
    example, all the stands were made from recycled material. We call all the
    producers, urging them to collect woos and we worked on the stands. In two days
    alone, we had more than 2,000 visitors from all over Romania. It is a mix of a
    craft and farm produce, street-food, live cooking
    show, a craftsmen fair and creative and educational workshops for children. The
    feedback-ul we had was a very good one. It is a festival-fair, staged with the
    purpose of socialization. Foreign tourists came as well. 90% of them were surprised and said they did not know
    what they would come across in Buzau. They only heard about the Muddy Volcanoes
    but they did not know anything about Geopark, about the culinary offer. So
    promotion has not been efficient enough, just as yet. We, through the slow-food,
    provided some sort of marketing through collaboration, with no budget whatsoever.
    We did everything through the socializing platforms. Those who participated
    shared their experience and that is how we managed to have 300,000 views a
    week.


    You may not have reached the craftsmen’s annual event, yet socializing
    opportunities do exist. The founding member of Buzau Slow Food Community Buzău,
    Thorsten Kirschner, says that, if you schedule a visit
    to the UNESCO Buzau Land Geopark, you can have the chance to find the legends
    of the people, of the culinary recipes, but also those of the numerous tourist
    assets in the region.


    Apart from the Muddy Volcanoes we’re all
    too familiar with, we have cave settlements, a salt mountain, the Amber Museum,
    we have old monasteries. Then there is also an offer for active tourism, such
    as rafting or cycling with electric bikes. Also, we have two interesting areas.
    In Dealu Mare there are interesting wine cellars and there also is this slow
    food network, comprising producers of craft beer of honey. You can have a taste
    of the produce and you can take them home.


    One of the targets the Slow
    Food movement has set for itself is that of preventing cultures and traditions
    from disappearing. Furthermore, opting for that kind of tourism also means we can
    enhance the interest in the food we eat, in its origin and in the way our food
    choice impacts the world around us.

  • May 21, 2023 UPDATE

    May 21, 2023 UPDATE

    EDUCATION On Monday the staff in Romania’s public undergraduate
    education will go on strike, the trade unions in the sector announced after
    Sunday’s talks with government officials. The protest will continue until
    unions have received a credible solution from the government, the leader of
    the Spiru Haret Trade Union Federation, Marius Nistor, said. The government put
    forth a clear roadmap for the endorsement of the new salary law and promised pay
    raises for non-teaching staff, which according to unionists would only amount
    to EUR 20 a month. Financial incentives for entry-level teachers and experienced
    staff teaching in underprivileged areas have also been proposed. The higher
    education staff will also go on token strikes as of Monday, the head of the Alma
    Mater National Trade Union Federation Anton Hadăr announced. Trade unions said
    negotiations would continue in the coming days.


    MOLDOVA
    A large-scale rally was held in Chişinău on Sunday, at the initiative of
    president Maia Sandu, in order to prove Moldovans’ support for the country’s EU
    accession. Europe is the Republic of Moldova. The Republic of Moldova is
    Europe. Moldova is not alone, the president of the European Parliament, Roberta
    Metsola said in Romanian at the European Moldova National Assembly. Participants
    adopted a resolution confirming the support of Moldovan citizens for the
    country’s EU accession efforts. The rally takes place as the Republic of
    Moldova, an EU accession candidate country, would like to begin accession
    negotiations by the end of this year. For this stage to begin, Moldova must
    complete 9 recommendations, which will be assessed by this autumn in a European
    Commission report. In Bucharest, the Organisation of Moldovan Students
    organised a similar rally in front of Moldova’s Embassy. Scores of people
    watched the speeches in Chisinau jointly with the Moldovan Ambassador to
    Bucharest, Victor Chirila.


    DIPLOMACY The Romanian foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu takes part on
    Monday in the meeting of the EU Foreign Affairs Council in Brussels. The EU
    foreign ministers will discuss measures to mitigate the effects of Russia’s
    aggression in Ukraine and the situation in the Horn of Africa. The EU officials
    will also touch on the bloc’s commitment in Central Asia, developments in Tunisia,
    the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the context of high-level EU
    diplomatic contacts with both countries. According to the Romanian foreign
    ministry, Bogdan Aurescu will reiterate Romania’s firm, multidimensional and
    continuing support for Ukraine and will express hopes that an agreement will be
    reached as soon as possible on the 8th support package for the
    Ukrainian air forces under the EU Peace Facility. Minister Aurescu will also
    highlight the importance of keeping pressure on Russia by consolidating
    sanctions, and will reiterate the idea of setting up a special international tribunal
    for the crime of aggression to prosecute Russian crimes of aggression during
    the war in Ukraine.


    RAILWAYS The president of Romania’s Competition Council, Bogdan
    Chiriţoiu, made statements concerning Carpatica Feroviar, a new company that
    will take over the operations of the state-owned railway freight corporation CFR
    Marfă. The new company will take over the profitable contracts and the
    equipment needed for completing them, while the other assets will be sold in order
    to cover as much as possible of the old company’s debts to the state budget
    Chiriţoiu explained. He emphasised that current operations will not be
    discontinued. The financial performance of CFR Marfă improved slightly in 2022,
    but the company still owes some EUR 400 mln to the state budget and social
    security budget.


    BEEKEEPERS Romanian beekeepers say they are left with large amounts
    of unsold honey because of imports of cheaper and poorer-quality honey. The
    head of the Romanian Beekeepers Association, Ioan Fetea, says the situation is
    particularly serious as last year’s yield was a lot smaller than in previous
    years. Last year beekeepers saw modest yields, but they could not even sell those,
    precisely because of these dumping practices, obviously explained by the fact
    that that honey is not in line with EU regulations. Almost half of the honey
    imported into Europe is adulterated, counterfeit, and obviously sold very
    cheaply, which puts tremendous pressure on local producers, Fetea explained. Beekeepers
    are also struggling with a fall in the number of bee families, because of the
    use of insecticides in agriculture.


    UKRAINE The US president Joe Biden Sunday announced new military aid
    measures for Ukraine, following talks with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy,
    on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Hiroshima. The new aid package will
    consist of ammunitions, artillery and armoured vehicles, Joe Biden explained, just
    days after approving the provision of F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine. According
    to Reuters, this new package is worth up to USD 375 mln and is designed to
    strengthen Ukraine’s defence in the war against Russia. The British PM Rishi
    Sunak also announced in Hiroshima that his country would start training
    Ukrainian pilots this summer, to support Ukraine’s air forces in the conflict.
    Rishi Sunak added that no one wants peace more than Volodymyr Zelenskyy, but
    the terms for peace, he added, should be based on Ukraine’s principles. In the
    3-day summit in Japan, the G7 nations voiced their willingness to stand by
    Ukraine in the long run.



    ROWING Romania won 2 gold and 3 silver medals at
    the 2023 European Rowing Under 19 Championships in Brive-la-Gaillarde, France,
    in which it took part with 11 boats. Romania came out second in the overall nations
    tables, behind Italy and ahead of Turkey. In last year’s competition, Romania
    had won 5 medals (3 gold, one silver and one bronze), and finished top of the
    ranking by nations. (AMP)

  • May 25, 2019 UPDATE

    May 25, 2019 UPDATE

    ELECTIONS Romanians will be voting in the European Parliamentary elections
    this Sunday and will also have their say in a referendum on justice summoned by
    the country’s president, Klaus Iohannis. 13 political groups and 3 independent
    candidates are vying for the 33 MEP seats earmarked to Romania but the 33rd
    mandate will come into effect though only after Britain’s leaving the block has
    produced judicial effects. 441 polling stations have been set up for the
    Romanians abroad, most of them in Italy, Spain and the neighboring ex-soviet
    Republic of Moldova, a country with a Romanian-speaking majority. Citizens in
    20 other EU countries are called to cast their ballot in these elections on
    Sunday. Britain, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Ireland, Slovakia, Latvia
    and Malta have already voted in the European Parliamentary elections.












    FINES Romanian police have given fines
    up to 13,800 Euros to people involved in illegal fishing activities on Danube
    River in a larger sting operation at European level, which involved several
    riparian countries. 90 people are being investigated for their alleged
    involvement in no less than 138 illegal activities on the Romanian side of this
    river. According to Romanian police sources, 26,500 Euros worth of goods have
    been seized by the police, consisting mainly in boats, fuel, fishing tools as
    well as roughly 200 kilos of fish. Search operations at European level, involved
    18 hundred vessels and over 25 thousand people.












    CONFERENCE Romania’s Agriculture Minister Petrre Daea on Saturday attended a
    conference entitled ‘Beekeeping in A European and Global Context’, an event
    held in Bucharest during Romania’s holding the EU rotating presidency. The
    event, staged on the occasion of the World Bee Day, was aimed at underlining
    the importance of these insects for the entire ecosystem against the background
    of the present climate change as well as their crucial role in raising crops
    production. Daea said Romania comes second in the EU after Spain in terms of
    bee families and the first in terms of honey production. Romania produces on an
    average 22 thousand tons of honey annually ranking fourth in Europe in terms of
    honey output. Statistics show though that Romanians are consuming 3-4 times
    less honey than in Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium.












    DISEASE 90 fresh cases of rubella have
    been reported in 8 counties across Romania and in capital Bucharest. According
    to the National Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance and Control, the
    total number of infections has reached 16,888; 64 of those infected have been
    killed and statistics show that a quarter of the people infected need hospital
    treatment, while a case out of one thousand dies. Doctors in Romania have again
    drawn attention to the need for immunization, especially of children, against
    serious diseases.










    NAFSA 24 Romanian universities are presenting their educational offer
    in Washington, over May 26th and 31st within the annual
    NAFSA exhibition, the most prestigious international event of this kind,
    Romania’s National Council of Rectors has announced. The conference is expected
    to bring together more than 10 thousand participants and 35 hundred
    universities from 100 countries. According to a communiqué of the National
    Council of Rectors, Romania offers a high-quality education environment as well
    as a series of facilities in its campuses up to European standards at better
    prices than in other European countries.






    (translated by bill)