See Portland's Bee Whisperer Hunt Giant Bees in Cambodia
Portland EATER | 13 January 2016
Adventures in the honey trade.
Bee Local is the fine local honey producer that also builds custom beehives for places like Vitaly Paley and Doug Adams's Imperial, and owner Damian Magista
recently returned from hunting the giant Asian honeybee, Apis dorsata,
which is over an inch long and builds massive hives often nine-feet
across, in the lawless wilderness of the Siem Reap province in Cambodia. Magista
says Cambodia is on the tipping point of losing its bees—mostly because
jungles are being destroyed, but also because people traditionally
harvest honey by whacking down and destroying entire hives. As you can
see in the photo essay below, Magista's hunt turned into an adventure.
—All photos by Damian Magista
The day after arriving, Magista took off on a 110CC motor scooter
at 6 a.m. to journey a rough 100 miles from the city of Siem Reap into
Cambodia. Stopping for breakfast at a roadside curry stand, Magista
said, "I want the one with congealed blood." The room-temperature curry
came with huge chunks of pumpkin with basil and hyacinth flowers.
Magista stayed with a family of rice farmers in a "fucking gorgeous"
part of Cambodia, and two of the family members were in the honey
business. In Cambodia, no one raises bees, so the people who bring you
honey are called honey hunters.
To do his part to help protect Cambodia's native bees, Magista
explained the importance of bees to the honey hunters he met, saying,
"You can't have mangos and guavas without them." He worked to explain
that honey can be harvested week by week if you don't destroy a whole
hive all at once.
The giant Asian honeybee is actually migratory—it follows the
blooming of local flowers. Magista aimed to time his visit with the
bee's arrival in the lowlands.
Magista easily accessed another bee, the dwarf bee, Apis florea, a tiny, colorful bee that has been around for 14 million years.
The giant Asian honeybee was harder to find because the flowers in the lowlands hadn't bloomed, yet. The honey hunters told Magista of a massive hive wrapped around a tamarind tree inside of the ancient Banteay Chhmar
temple complex. Should we ask for permission to chop it down, they
asked? Magista politely declined. Here are some pictures of frogs
butchered for dinner.
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