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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 8th, 2023

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  • Solid puns but this is actually a problem. Beehives are quite valuable, like $500 per hive or so to just straight up sell them, or obviously they can also be incorporated into an apiary for long-term production.

    Theft of beehives is really not unheard of. Similar to how people steal cows and shit. Beekeepers will sometimes brand or otherwise mark their hives in an attempt to deter such thievery.

    Personally I keep my beehives in huge steel cages, though that is primarily to protect them from bears.






  • If you’re able to find time to do a 10 day vipassana retreat, I highly recommend it. It’s free and they provide good food, run entirely by volunteers and donations and they have centers all over the world. I’ve done it a couple times and I know several other folks who have and it is a very compelling experience. I really think the technique they teach is a real cognitive skill, it’s taught from a buddhist perspective but there is no requirement that you adhere to any particular spiritual beliefs.

    I’m sure there are other forms of meditation that may or may not be helpful, this is just the one I’ve had positive experiences with.




  • Hi, I’m Whelmer, never maintained a reddit account but I was a chronic lurker and was pleased to discover this whole Lemmy thing recently. Always had a love/hate thing with reddit and this place reduces significantly the latter part of that equation.

    I’m an organic orchardist by trade, novice gardener and beekeeper as well. Been into Linux and FOSS for the past decade or so. I also like to play and build synthesizers. Though these days I’m not finding a lot of time for my non-economic hobbies.

    Thanks for creating and maintaining this community.


  • Does your Libby have the same shit as mine?

    Recently listened to The Dawn of Everything by David Graeber and David Wengrow, Wendell Berry: Unsettling of America, Steve Coll: Directorate S, also Coll: Shadow Wars, Raven by Tim Reiterman, Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakaeur,The Stranger in the Woods by Michael Finkel. We Carry Their Bones by Erin Kimmerle.

    All non-fiction but all good. The two books by Coll are two of the best books I’ve ever read, if you’re at all interested in the Afghan war or the CIA. And David Graeber is definitely a favourite of mine as well.

    Also, if you don’t know about it, Librivox is a cool source for audiobooks. It’s all volunteer-read from Project Guttenburg. The quality can be a little rough if you’re used to profressional audiobooks, but some of the readers are really good and there’s a lot of great stuff. A reader I really like on that platform is called Expatriate, loved his reading of Don Quioxote.