Good morning 15th and Baker
Beings I've been a mentor for our county for 4 years now, I've worked with countless new and seasoned beekeepers. A couple of seasons into mentoring it was becoming clear to me that not every beekeeper falls in love with or is enthrauled with their honeybees. Year after year their hives would die from starvation by spring, or they would say "Naah, I'm not going into all that extra expense for a mite I cannot see" resulting in their dead hives by spring. I would encourage them to come to our monthly meetings, but no show. And yet, they will order two replacement nucs/packages every single spring at the expense of $330, from our club and say "I don't know why my bees die every year?"
To shorten this story, I have realized two things. Some people simply see honeybees as a box of dispensable insects. I know this for a fact ... some beekeepers buy nucs every year, do nothing to help them survive, take the honey for holiday gifts, let the beehive die out, next spring buy new nucs.
Some people think that the lack of honeybees on our planet is "A Hoax" or "Fake News" if you will.
And by and large, women make more compassionate beekeepers, although I have come a cross men beekeepers that absolutely love everything thing about their bees and do what they need to keep them alive, plus they are up on all the newest news about bees.
So in my journey of honeybee journey, I haven't really learned more about bees per say, but I have learned a lot about how each beekeeper percieves his or her bees.