In this special Thanksgiving episode, Jim revisits a cherished conversation with the late Kim Flottum, reflecting on their shared passion for beekeeping books and the joy of exploring bee knowledge together. From rare finds like Beekeeping New and Old...
In this special Thanksgiving episode, Jim revisits a cherished conversation with the late Kim Flottum, reflecting on their shared passion for beekeeping books and the joy of exploring bee knowledge together. From rare finds like Beekeeping New and Old to beloved staples like The Hive and the Honey Bee, Jim and Kim delve into the excitement and challenges of collecting bee literature. They discuss favorite authors, trusted resources like USDA pamphlets, and how beekeeping knowledge continues to evolve.
Hearing Kim’s voice again reminds us of his warmth, insight, and dedication to the beekeeping world—qualities deeply missed nearly a year after his passing. This episode offers a heartfelt tribute to Kim and a reminder of the wealth of knowledge and friendship that beekeeping brings.
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Music: Heart & Soul by Gyom, All We Know by Midway Music; Christmas Avenue by Immersive Music; original guitar music by Jeffrey Ott
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Jim Tew: Honey Bee Obscura listeners, Jim Tew. Thanksgiving is all over us. Part of my family is already here, the rest are on the way, food to buy, houses to clean, preparations to make. It's a good time to take a breather. If it's okay with you, I'd like to do something that I did with Kim when it was Kim and Jim doing the Honey Bee Obscura Podcast. Most of you know, Kim loved to read. He loved to write. He had more books than you could imagine. I thought I'd pick out one that was Kim's idea on a visit that he and I did to a small bookstore. Here it is for your Thanksgiving Day reflection. Happy Thanksgiving.
[music]
Kim Flottum: Well, Jim, I haven't seen you for a while. It's good to see you here in the bookstore. I always like bookstores.
Jim: Bookstores are nice places. They have that odor. What is the odor of a bookstore, that bookstore smell?
Kim: I've been laid up for a while, and the only books I've been looking at are on the shelf in my room here. I'm back and it's good to see you again. What are you looking for there?
Jim: What am I looking for? I would like to find an old bee book. It was a two-book set, Bee-keeping New andOld. It's a British book. I don't have any chance of finding it, Kim, but it's something to look for.
Kim: That's half the fun, looking for it because you find something else. Hi, I'm Kim Flottum.
Jim: I'm Jim Tew.
Kim: We're here today with Honey Bee Obscura, in some bookstore, and we're going to be looking for books and talking about all sorts of things about books.
Introduction: Welcome to Honey Bee Obscura, brought to you by Growing Planet Media, the producers of the Beekeeping Today Podcast. Join Jim Tew, your guide through the complexities, the beauty, the fun, and the challenges of managing honeybees. Jim hosts fun and interesting guests who take a deep dive into the intricate world of honeybees. Whether you're a seasoned beekeeper or just getting started, get ready for some plain talk that'll delve into all things honeybees.
Kim: You mentioned the book you're looking for. I've got to tell you, I've been under the weather for a while here, and I'm starting to come back up, at least I am today, and I take every day that I can get. I'm looking at books here in my study. I get a book, you look at it, or maybe you review it, or maybe you get it read if you're lucky, and you put it on the shelf, and four years later, you see it again. That's where I am with my books. I'm looking at books to see what's here, you're looking for something specific.
Jim: Well, I'm looking for something specific because you need to have a reason. I've got to tell you, during the pandemic years and recently, these books have become important to me because I'm not a young man, Kim, and I forget, and so you think, well, I read somewhere. I'm trying to write an article. I read somewhere some fact about beekeeping, which book was it? Then you go on this hunt where you try to find where it was that you read something years ago that you want to be able to cite now. That's the kind of thing I've been doing.
Kim: Well, I do a lot of that. The other thing I do when it gets to the books is, I know I have that book somewhere. I remember reviewing it. It was by, what's his name? That guy from, oh, somewhere out west. Probably, California, I can't remember. It had in it everything I wanted to know about the subject I was looking for. I got to find that book.
Jim: Yes, I hate that. Do you have your hundreds of books organized or are they just stuck on a shelf?
Kim: [laughs]
Jim: Okay. Now, I'm glad to hear that because that's part of the reason I have to search. Mine had the remnants of an organization back when I had more time and energy, but it's just remnants now, Kim, there's books on the floor, there's books on the shelves. When I'm looking for a particular book, it takes a while. Sometimes it can take me a month to figure out I don't have that book anymore. If I don't have that book anymore, how long has it been gone, and where is it?
Kim: Yes. It sounds like you're looking over my shoulder at my books over here on the floor and in the shelves, and falling off, and in piles. I know I'll find it something-- I don't know that I'll find it. You said exactly the right thing. Did I have it? If I did, do I have it now? If I don't, where is it? I can see I'm still getting back up to speed, getting things done around here and other places. I can see organizing a library here. Is it pretty close to the top of my list of getting things done?
Jim: No, that ain't going to happen, Kim. I'm not organizing. I've got so many things on fire right now. Not the least of which are living bee colonies that aren't going to be living if I don't do something, but I should, I spend too much time. I can't get off the subject here, Kim, but I spend the same amount of time looking for pictures. Oh, I remember making a picture of something that I need right now for some particular project I'm working on, and then here we go, the 2.5 hours looking at 3,000 pictures, and then finding one that will do, but not the one that I wanted, books are like that.
If I can't find the book that cited exactly what I wanted, can I find a book that cites it close enough? Then you move on. What I wanted to say, do you have a series, an author that really calls to you, that you use a lot in your editing of your own books, and reading, and reviewing, and writing?
Kim: I've got several publishers that I go to because I know they favor the things that I'm looking for at the moment. Wicwas Press is one of them and Northern Bee Books is another one of them for old bee books. There's Princeton University Press. Talk about top shelf science, there's a good one right there. When I'm looking for hardcore science, I know where to go. When I'm looking for how to, when I'm looking for history, there's some places I know where to start. If I don't find them there, well, it's suppertime, and we'll look tomorrow.
Jim: There's two kinds of searches in my life, there's old books, can you find it? Kim, there's an option that, I guess, we should mention here. There's an option for finding these books, sometimes online in archival form. If you can't find a physical copy, you may be able to find an online copy, something like archive.org, or something like that. That's been helpful. In searching for this book, I want to read this title to you, Kim. Bee-Keeping Newand Old described with Pen and Camera, by Herrod-Hempsall.
Kim: Oh, I know that name.
Jim: It's a giant book. I was surprised to find out that I only have half the series. It was a two set series. I was listening while you were talking, I'm going to contact some of those distributors you mentioned to see if I can find the companion book. I don't buy as many bee books as I used to. They're online, they're everywhere. There's just a wealth of beekeeping information on every subject. As a younger man, I could buy every bee book that came out, I can't do that now. You and I both would have to have nothing in our house, but books if we bought every one of them.
Kim: Yes. That book by Hempsall. Did I get the name right?
Jim: I think you did. We'll probably have somebody correct both of us, but I think you did.
Kim: You mentioned that book and it's a two-part book, and you got one part. I'm not a 100% positive that I don't have the other part hiding behind this pile of books here on the floor. I tell you what, I'm going to go look for that today, and next time we get together, maybe between the two of us, we'll have the whole book. What do you think?
Jim: Well, are you teasing me or is this a real promise, Kim?
Kim: [laughs]
Jim: It sounds like you're not going to look for that book, but thanks for saying you are.
Kim: Okay.
Jim: Well, I like that. I've used that book a lot for reference. I'm not selling the book, but when you're doing specific things for maybe an eccentric article you're writing on maybe tanging bees, it's not always easy to find information. That big book had information on tanging bees-
Kim: Tanging [crosstalk]
Jim: This is just not traditional things that I'm looking for. You said you look for publishers. I tend to go more for authors that have written in genres that I like. Anything Eva Crane wrote, Honey: A Comprehensive Survey,The World History of Beekeeping and Honey Hunting, she just wrote tomes on those things. I usually have a good shot of finding something there. I don't want to mention an author. There's authors everywhere. I don't have a favorite author, so by mentioning a name like Dr. Crane don't mean to put them above all the other authors who've made contributions. Those kind of books are really helpful, they review me, they make me come up with questions that stimulate me, and they reinvigorate me in beekeeping.
Kim: I couldn't have summed that up better. Between you and me, and the people listening here today, I hope, that's what they should be doing. Take a look at those books on your shelf. If you don't have any on your shelf or not enough, there's always the internet. Take a look at what's out there. There's more than you can imagine.
Jim: Kim, while we're imagining, let's take a break to hear from our sponsor.
[music]
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Jim: One of the places, Kim, that I get information that I'm embarrassed to admit is old, but it's solid basic information, it's not even a book, it's old USDA pamphlets.
Kim: Oh, yes.
Jim: There's old pamphlets on transferring bees, there's old pamphlets on wintering bees and sellers. I go back because that was ground zero. That was the first information that was published. All of those pamphlets are archived on the web. It's not always books, Kim. Sometimes there's information more in pamphlet form.
Kim: That USDA collection is invaluable without a doubt. Invaluable. I'll tell you why very quickly. It's before it got into the collection, 50 people looked at it to make sure everything in it was right, at least currently up to date when it was published.
Jim: Those things were highly edited and they were as correct as they could have been. They were usually very general articles. I've enjoyed using those things and my academic life, people like Snodgrass, how did that guy ever get anything else done other than write those books on honeybee anatomy or insect anatomy, insect physiology. I use him a lot, but he had his own style. Every little minuscule part of a bee, every little bump, every little hair had a name and then he abbreviated the name. You couldn't just look at the diagram, you had to break his code.
Once you break his code, it was absolutely insurmountable information. There's those kinds of books that are highly technical, highly specific, and highly valuable at that instant when you really need that information.
Kim: From those kinds of books come the other two groups of people who use that information. I'm thinking of the ABC and XYZ of Bee Culture by the Root Company and The Hive and the Honey Bee by Dadant. If you own all of those books, published it forever, you're right up to date. It's all as good as it gets. There's another way to go is to take the information that the scientists and those people have published, put it in a book, and then collect that book. I happen to have, he says carefully, I think most of the ABCs ever published and most of the hive and honeybees ever published.
Jim: That's a collection.
Kim: It's a collection. Let me tell you about 60 books you'd have to fall through to find what you're looking for.
Jim: I want to say something here, Kim, at this point, I want to say it politely and kindly, but things change. When you're reading those old books, you need to know that sometimes the information that is contained there is no longer considered accurate or appropriate. Just going back and wrapping yourself in that warm ambience of that musty smelling book doesn't necessarily mean that what that author was telling you is the right way to go then. Reader beware, things have changed, things have improved. We know more. Sometimes it's great for a review and sometimes it's great for taking you down the wrong path.
Kim: It's almost true what you say about a lot of things. It's not a date before the ink is dry, so you got to be careful. Anyway, I'm going to spend some time looking at books for a while and I guess you are too looking for the one you're missing.
Jim: You didn't mean to open this can of worms, but somebody borrowed my ABC and XYZ of Beekeeping.That was my original bee book. I don't have it anymore. If I knew where it was, I'd ask for it back, but I'd like to pursue looking for that book too. Just strictly 100% for supplemental reasons.
Kim: Can I make you a deal? If I got it, we'll talk.
Jim: Oh, okay. Well I guess you're going to want to talk money too, so this is going to be a complicated deal. I won't bore the listeners with the specifics of the book, but I would like to replace that. As a young man, Kim, 50 years ago you bought three bee books. Basically, you bought The Hive and the Honey Bee, you bought ABC,and there was another book by Eckert and Shaw called Beekeeping. That was primarily on the west coast. It was West coast beekeeping and that was it. Other than some USDA pamphlets, that was your library.
You were of age, you were bibliographically prepared. Look at the number of spectacular books, vivid color pictures, what great resources are available today to people just starting to buy their bee books.
Kim: Then you go to a meeting and find out that what you thought was right is now out of date and you better learn something else.
Jim: Oh, you had to tack that on. You had to tack that on. We talk about bees all the time, Kim. We talk about bees and anything related to bees on this podcast, but we need to say where we get our information is books. Even though I use the web, just like everybody else listening, we need to use it every day, we're still going to the web to get what? Books, information. The web has changed things, but the web hasn't changed everything.
[music]
Kim: I couldn't have said it better and I think we should be about done here, aren't we?
Jim: I could talk about books for about 20 more hours, but that's not going to work, is it?
Kim: Yes.
Jim: All right. Kim, I'm glad you're back, buddy. I know you're still not back at full power, but I look forward to working with you again.
Kim: I'll catch you next time. Thanks.
Jim: All the best. Bye-bye.
[00:16:45] [END OF AUDIO]
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