Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bay Area hotels make room for guests of apian kind

Honeybees get hive help from businesses

- By KRISTIN J. BENDER

SAN FRANCISCO — At the Clift Hotel in San Francisco, there are more than 370 rooms inside and hundreds of thousands of bees buzzing above in rooftop hives outside. Yes, honeybees. Aware of the well-publicized environmen­tal threats to honeybees that have reduced numbers worldwide, seven San Francisco hotels have built hives on their rooftops. The sustainabi­lity effort also benefits the hotels as the bees produce honey for cocktails, food and spa treatments. It’s the latest in a series of environmen­tal programs at hotels that includes low-flow toilets and aggressive recycling programs.

“This is not about making money, it’s really about raising awareness about sustainabi­lity,” said Melissa Farrar, spokeswoma­n at the Fairmont in San Francisco. “There’s not one solution so we wanted to do our part to help. It’s part of the bigger effort for helping the planet.”

Farrar said the four hives on the rooftop garden support about 250,000 bees and produce about 1,000 pounds of honey each year.

In this foodie city, the honey is used in such things as the Clift’s The Peerless Purple drink with gin-infused lavender, honey syrup and lavender bitters, and their compressed watermelon salad with lavender-infused honey and goat cheese. Honey is used in beer at the Fairmont Hotel, and the jars of the product are sold in the gift shop. At the W, they make honey ice cream.

The bee hives at hotels are not new, but the effort is growing every year.

Fairmont’s first beehives were built in 2008 at the company’s hotels in Toronto and in Vancouver in an effort to help combat colony collapse disorder. Since then, dozens have been installed at Fairmonts from Seattle to China and Africa.

At the Clift, high above the city on the rooftop garden, 10 hives are buzzing with activity. Most guests don’t even know they are there. But the fruits of their labor are evident in the cocktails and food.

The bees are on track to produce more than 70 pounds of honey per hive by this summer. The colony is expected to grow at least 800,000 by next year, General Manager Michael Pace said.

His interest in bee hotels started last year when he took on the job of chairman of the Sustainabi­lity Committee for the Hotel Council of San Francisco. He spearheade­d a larger effort between local hotels to put bees on their rooftops as well. There are now seven hotels from Nob Hill to Fisherman’s Wharf with rooftop hives.

At six of the hotels, the man who tends the hives is Roger Garrison, a waiter at the W San Francisco turned bee keeper.

Sometimes the job is painless.

“Most of the time you just open the hives and everything is copasetic,” he said.

Other times, it’s not. He gets stung almost daily.

“It’s like taking a daily vitamin,” he said.

But the payoff is big. Last year, the hotel produced 300 pounds of honey.

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