ScreenShot2022-02-01at4.26.50pm
About 10 years ago I installed a hive at the bottom of our garden, as many of our fruit trees were flowering but not setting fruit. To look after bees requires slowing down and learning through observing how the hive functions. Opening the hive with a friend who had once been a professional beekeeper, finding the queen and discovering the workings of the hive - its complexity and the beauty of bees both individually and collectively - was magic.
-

Learning about bees and the hive became a passion. Bees are completely independent of you. They are not yours. Yet you have a sense of responsibility for the quality of their lives, their larger environment and the site you created for them. Is there a viable queen? How well is she laying? Is that the sound of a healthy hive? Are the bees fat and healthy or are the young bees struggling? Is there a flash of early morning light hitting the hive to excite the start of their day?

My relationship with bees grew out of curiosity and into a kind of love affair. I thought about them obsessively and learnt a lot about the inner workings of the hive. I adored the sights, sounds and smells of the hive, and these preoccupations set me wondering about how I might combine two passions - and be both artist and beekeeper.

Screen Shot 2022-02-01 at 12.06.17 pm.png
Screen Shot 2022-02-01 at 12.09.46 pm.png
- An extract from Conversātiō: In the Company of Bees by Anne Noble with Zara Stanhope and Anna Brown. Published by Massey University Press, 2021. Softcover, $60. 
An extract from Conversātiō: In the Company of Bees by Anne Noble with Zara Stanhope and Anna Brown. Published by Massey University Press, 2021. Softcover, $60.

Related Stories

Turning out and giving back – two female volunteer firefighters on life in the brigade

Karley and Manaka got together to share what it’s like to be a mum, career woman and local hero - on the Ōakura volunteer fire brigade.

Read More

Surviving – and thriving ­– with four under five on the farm

Marlborough farmers Ellie and Tom were thrilled to learn they were having twins, but, with two children under five already, were unsure how they’d survive.

Read More
New Forest - sign

The forest school regenerating native bush and growing inquisitive young minds

For the past thirteen years, Hella has been overseeing not only the regeneration of 240 acres of native bush in the Wairarapa but also nurturing local children’s connection with nature.

Read More

The Fabric of Change

Bhalupali, a rural village in northern India is a long way from Hawke’s Bay, where Ana Wilkinson-Gee grew up, but this is where she has found her purpose.

Read More

Out Now

Twenty-Sixth Edition

Our Takurua Winter Edition is out 8 June.

Do you have a story to tell?

We'd love to hear it.