tec, I gotta agree with you...but I'll also state that lots of older people who have had doctorates for years actually know little about what they present. There was a lady in our town who had a PhD, had been a university instructor, and wrote a book dealing with southeastern Native Americans and the cult complex between Spiro AR, Moundville AL, and Etowa GA. Nice book, good photography, blah, blah, blah. I had bought a copy of her book and being local decided to drop by her house and get her to sign it for me. I carried a few artifacts with me for her to comment on and give me her thoughts on...surface finds in local fields. Well, we got to talking and as we talked I began to sense that I knew more about the people that use to walk the earth here than she did. What made me pack up and leave, though, was when she picked up two of my pieces and started hitting them against each other in a *very* lame demonstration of how the utensils were made. Basically she had researched and compiled a book at knew little of what she had "compiled". At least the young buy with the bees was trying to practice some of what he'd learned.
A couple of things noted in the video...
Notice how nicely and slowly he rolls those bees with the brush? I'm sure the ladies were happy after that.
Also, the banana remarks... Everybody can make there own choice about mixing bananas and bees, but I've never had a problem with them. I've mixed them with oil in shb traps that were placed in hives and the bees paid no attention to them.
Here's a short youtube video that Scott from Alysian Apiaries down in Florida made that includes bees and bananas.
Ed