The Timaru Herald

Bees ‘a family pet’ in city settings

- JOEL INESON

An unlikely trend is infiltrati­ng urban businesses and even becoming ‘‘a family pet’’ in Christchur­ch homes – bees.

An increase in the number of registered amateur beekeepers over the past few years has spread to CBD businesses investing in ‘‘rooftop hives’’ and urban residents setting up in their backyards.

The first jars of honey produced in the Botanic Gardens’ hives went on sale at the Visitor Centre gift shop this week, joining similar steps made by Ballantyne­s department store at the beginning of 2016.

Mark van Dooren, head of maintenanc­e for Ballantyne­s, set up eight rooftop hives – about 80,000 bees – and the company sold two types of honey as well as using it for its production kitchen.

It was something he had never done before, in or outside of work, but he expected the bees would have produced ‘‘upwards’’ of about 40 kilograms of honey when he harvested again in about six weeks.

’’Part of my job is I’m up here quite a bit, you know, servicing the maintenanc­e areas and air conditioni­ng. It seemed an ideal location for them – they’re not going to be disturbed and are not disturbing anybody else.’’

Christchur­ch Hobbyist Beekeepers’ Club (CHBC) member Lee Carmichael said she alone had about 150 hives dotted around the city.

The Christchur­ch club had more than 200 members, up from about 70 in 2014, Carmichael said. She had been running a delivery service for bees in people’s homes since 2009.

Van Dooren said he thought it was ‘‘great’’ that people in the city were continuing to get involved with beekeeping.

’’It’s not about just having honey. The Canterbury plains and farmers rely on it . . . It’s very healthy that [city dwellers] are actually starting to say ‘right, I want a hive in my home and I can educate my kids’. It’s all for the greater good I think.’’

The Christchur­ch City Council has no specific guidelines or bylaws for keeping bees in the home, aside from informatio­n for removal of pests.

Carmichael said an urban environmen­t could prove more beneficial to both the bees and their output as long as the right precaution­s were taken.

’’You get lots of food in town because there’s lots of things flowering at different times of the year. The bees actually do better, usually, for food, but being in town you’ve got to be aware of whether you’ve got the right back garden.’’

She said bees in urban areas often became ‘‘an extension of the family’’.

‘‘People really like them. You become very passionate about your bees . . . they become a family pet, really.’’

– Fairfax NZ

Bomb scare at prison

The Hawke’s Bay Regional Prison was in lockdown yesterday morning because of a bomb scare . Police were called to the prison at 9.30am following a threatenin­g call about an ‘‘item of concern’’, police said. The prison was placed into lockdown as emergency services scoured the site. Just after 1.30pm Correction­s confirmed no item was found on the site and the prison was no longer in lockdown.

Train heads south next week

For the first time since the earthquake, a train will be able to head south to Lake Grassmere on Monday after extensive repairs to the Main North Line. The job facing engineers and track gangs to repair the 347-kilometre stretch of rail between Picton and Christchur­ch has been described as the biggest in generation­s. More than 150 kilometres of the line was damaged in the November earthquake, which twisted railway tracks, sent slips over the route and caused structural damage to bridges and tunnels. KiwiRail would be running a test train to Lake Grassmere on Monday, the first time a train had been further south than Spring Creek, north of Blenheim, since the earthquake.

Blaze reignited

Strong winds reignited a bush fire near Queenstown, briefly forcing the road to close only 30 minutes after it opened. Six helicopter­s were back in the air at 4.30pm yesterday to fight the rekindled 150-hectare fire on a hillside near Queenstown. The blaze began about 11.30pm on Tuesday, forcing authoritie­s to close the road between Queenstown and Glenorchy. It reopened mid-afternoon, closing briefly as the flames reignited, before reopening again about 4.30pm. Queenstown police believe the fire started at a Rat Point lakeside camping area. The fire reached a 100m high ridgeline.

Aftershock ‘severe’

A ‘‘severe’’ earthquake shook Wellington and the upper South Island at 1.19pm yesterday. The 5.1 magnitude shake was centred 15 kilometres east of Seddon, at a depth of 11km. GeoNet initially rated the quake as strong. It was later upgraded to severe. GeoNet duty seismologi­st Anna Kaiser said it was an aftershock from the November quake. ’’It’s been a very busy place. This is part of the normal and expected behaviour of aftershock sequences.’’

Trio jailed for ‘callous attack’

A Blenheim woman and two men have been jailed for terms of up to five years and 10 months for beating a terminally-ill man, robbing him of his medication, and leaving him on the side of a rural highway. The attack, in Marlboroug­h’s Wairau Valley in December 2015, left the victim, Colin Peter Farrell, with injuries, unable to eat and unable to leave his house. Farrell has since died from his illness. Lynne Amanda Jackson, 52, and Dennis Edward Bullen, 55, both of Blenheim, denied charges of aggravated robbery and aggravated injury, claiming it was a drug deal gone wrong, but were found guilty following a trial in Nelson last year. A third offender, Ilyas Ismail Guler, 29, a German national who is in New Zealand on a working holiday visa, had previously admitted the same charges. ‘‘It was a callous attack. It was not the most sophistica­ted plan . . . but each of you played an important role in the robbery,’’ Judge Tony Zohrab said at their sentencing at the Blenheim District Court on Tuesday.

 ?? PHOTO: JOSEPH JOHNSON/FAIRFAX NZ ?? Mark van Dooren, head of maintenanc­e for Canterbury retailer Ballantyne­s, checking one of a handful of hives situated on the roof of the Ballantyne­s Christchur­ch city centre.
PHOTO: JOSEPH JOHNSON/FAIRFAX NZ Mark van Dooren, head of maintenanc­e for Canterbury retailer Ballantyne­s, checking one of a handful of hives situated on the roof of the Ballantyne­s Christchur­ch city centre.

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