By
TELLA LOIE
A total of 50 farmers successfully
completed a honey bee beginner’s training workshop held in Goroka recently.
The bee farmers and trainers outside
Goroka council chambers.-Picture by TELLA LOIE
|
The farmers, both men and women from the
Goroka district, have had no training previously while others were newcomers to
the honey bee industry.
The week-long training was funded by Goroka
MP, Thompson Haroquave, and conducted by the bee team comprising of team leader
and Eastern Highlands provincial apiculture officer Tella Loie, Isten Hailans Beekeepers
Association chairman Jonah Buka, zone coordinator/beekeeper Wilson Tomato,
beekeeper Aya Sam and Department of Agriculture and Livestock acting programme
manager Joachim Waugla.
Loie and the bee team, which has conducted
similar training in Madang and Bulolo, normally train 15 to 20 people but the
Goroka one was a big surprise when 50 people turned up.
The one-week workshop enriched those who
knew little about the bees while others were very excited about the new
concept.
The farmers were taught all aspects of
beekeeping, from goals and responsibilities to knowing the hive parts, what
protective gear to use against bee stings, honeybee family, how to get started
to site selection, beehive management, pests and diseases, swarming and swarm
control, queen bees, harvesting, processing, packaging and marketing.
One condition for the participants to
qualify for a certificate was for each participant to get stung by a bee.
This was to see if the ‘would be
beekeepers’ were allergic to bee stings or not.
Loie said it was the first time that an
Eastern Highlands MP had taken the lead to fund beekeeping training.
The MP had also funded a similar training
programme on how to grow African yams, an initiative to prepare for the 2012
drought.
Loie urged other MPs to do likewise and
fund farmer training programmes in various agricultural activities.
Participants
expressed their gratitude and appreciation to Haroquave for his foresight and
vision for the people of Goroka.
Pulex Oti from Hegu village, Kabiufa, said
beekeeping could be fun, enjoyable and very challenging if one was serious
about it.
Pulex started beekeeping in 2003.
He currently owns 40 beehives.
He sells his honey to New Guinea Fruit
Company based in Goroka.
He said the current price for the honey was
K9 –K10/kg.
Oti appealed to participants to take beekeeping
seriously as it was an impact project and fitted in well into the subsistent
way of life.
Buka, on behalf of the participants,
thanked Haroquave and the district administration for the commitment towards
the training.
He said that the MP had purchased 120
beehives, a honey extractor, protective gear and others.
He
also thanked the bee team for giving the participants life skills training.
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