1400 beehives destroyed by fire, then within a year another 700 to flooding, soon after that small hive beetle wipes out 500 more, and then close to another 1000 fall victim to the varroa mite incursion. In Grafton, northern NSW, Australia, Wayne Fuller and Janine Rudder have seen their beekeeping operation ravaged by Mother Nature and invasive parasites over the last six years. We get the grizzly details and learn how, with ongoing resilience, they are progressing their business to the next generation.
With approximately 4000 beehives and 600 sites, the Fuller family beekeeping business, Bee Services is a serious enterprise. Serious in its ability to provide for partners Wayne and Janine, Wayne’s brother Steven, Wayne’s two daughters and their partners, plus six more staff members and other labour hire staff when required for extracting; but also serious in the nature of that work – generating an annual honey harvest of anywhere between 150 and 250 tonnes, pollinating vast areas of crops, and at times having to destroy their own hives for a proposed greater good.
In August last year Fuller and Rudder attended The Beekeepers Conference in Whanganui, where Fuller took to the main stage to give a beekeeper’s perspective on small hive beetle. Following that, the couple sat down with Apiarist’s Advocate to provide greater insight into Bee Services, and the challenges which they have had to overcome in recent years.
A Family Affair
Bee Services has long been “a family affair”, with Wayne at the helm for 45 years and Steven for 12 years. Now with Wayne’s daughters and their partners in the mix, along with wife Janine, the family connection is stronger still and it’s coming time for the next generation to take on a greater mantle. But, with Fuller still busied in office and field and Rudder dedicating a lot of time to site management, handing over is a gradual process.
“Janine has told them she is retiring, and I have told them I will give them another year,” Fuller says.
“I don’t want to leave, but at the moment I am probably working 80 hours a week. I want to cut back, I need to cut back. First, I need to make sure the kids have a good year and I leave them in a good position.”
Despite working those long hours, Fuller says his physical abilities – especially his ability to lift heavy weights – are diminished following a cancer diagnosis in 2012 and the resulting treatment.
Plenty to Do
Bee Services revenue is a near even split between organic honey production and pollination contracts. Around 1000 of their 4000 hives are organic, supplying Australia honey behemoth Capilano. Honey varieties harvested include Ironbark, Spotted Gum, Bloodwood and other eucalypt species and hives can sometimes be on honey sites for just six weeks before they are moved off to chase the next flow.
The other 3000 hives work even harder, bouncing between pollination jobs and honey sites, making for plenty of hive movements – compounded by even more movements when fleeing bushfires.
About 2200 hives go from a six month blueberry placement between February/March and August/September, then a stint in macadamia orchards for about six weeks in spring, before heading back to the blueberries for their summer crop for six more weeks, starting in December. Others hit the berry crops, with blueberries, raspberries and blackberries all receiving visits.
All that pollination work is a recent-addition to the long-running business, with change coming about following that all too common Australian scourge – bushfire.
Diversity Following Destruction
“In 2019 we were simply bulk honey producers, 250 tonne of honey a year and then a bit of pollination for a neighbour,” Fuller explains.
“Then in the bush fires we had 1400 hives of bees burnt and lost all our floral resources. So, we swung over to pollination. That’s what we figured we had to do because we lost 80 percent of our country.”
2019-20 has been dubbed ‘Black Summer’ in Australia, due to the wide-ranging fires which ravaged numerous states. That included New South Wales where, for nine months from July 2019 to March 2020, uncontrolled fires burned.
With their honey production sites being so remote, there was no chance of stopping the fire from reaching their hives. However, some hives were able to be rescued and relocated in a frantic few months where Fuller only stopped for sleep … and then only occasionally.
“Three months straight and barely any sleep,” he recalls.
In the end, it was Rudder who decided something had to change.
“They were working all day, then moving hives every night, because fires would pop up everywhere,” she says.
“In the end I said to the guys, ‘you can’t keep doing this. You are going to have an accident, fall asleep at the wheel.’ I told them just to bring all the hives home.”
So that’s what they did. Between 600 and 700 hives in the backyard of their property and another 800-900 to their Grafton base.
“I remember calling a neighbour and saying, ‘be aware there is going to be a couple of truck and trailer loads of beehives coming home tonight and I don’t know whether you are going to get hit with bees or not tomorrow’,” Rudder says.
It was far from ideal – “you couldn’t walk outside the front door for the first few days because the bees were so disorientated” – but at least they could see the hives, and get water to them quickly if needed.
It was more than a year after the last fire was put out until the bees were able to recover themselves, as they struggled to adapt to a charred landscape.
“The fires stopped in 2021 when it started raining, but the hives were still dying. You would put them out on site and the bees would go out and not come back,” Fuller remembers.
“I spoke to Liz Frost at the Department at Ag and she had seen it before in the Californian fires and said you need six generations of bees for them to get their directional sense back, so they can find where they are going to.”
When the Rain Comes… But Doesn’t Go
All up around 1400 hives were either directly or indirectly lost to the devastating fires of 2019-20. In a cruel twist of fate, more disaster awaited the NSW beekeepers though.
First 200 hives were swept away in flooding in 2021, then one of Australia’s worst recorded flood disasters struck Queensland and northern New South Wales in February 2022. Grafton, located on the floodplain of the Clarence River, was in the firing line again. This time 500 Bee Services hives were inundated.
As if those four years of torment at the hands of Mother Nature were not enough to test their team, as the flood waters receded in 2022 a new foe was on their doorstep – small hive beetle.
‘Small’, but Mighty Destructive
“There were about 8000 hives washed away in the Lismore flood area and that created a massive hive beetle problem,” Fuller says.
“Even though we are 100km away, we were badly affected. The beetle will fly seven kilometres, but it will find a hive then hop to the next hive. It was looking for food because it had run out of food in its original area.”
Eventually they found food too, located in the beehives of their new domain. The result would be the loss of 500 more Bee Services hives to the invading beetle as it consumed honey and pollen, taking over the beehives and “sliming them out” with its faeces.
Yes, 2022 was a terrible year, but the team at the helm of Bee Services take a pragmatic approach.
“The way I looked at it was, OK we lost beehives, we lost all this, but we didn’t lose any lives. That was the only good I could look at coming out of it,” Rudder says.
Having had several seasons to learn to manage the beetle, Fuller says it is not all that big of a concern, while noting other beekeepers might disagree with that assessment.
“You just have to stay on top of it. As long as you don’t under estimate it, it is no different from American foulbrood (AFB). If you don’t take AFB out, it will take you out.”
Varroa’s Turn
Witnessing Mother Nature, or an invasive pest, wreak havoc with your livestock is one thing, but having humans inflict the destruction is another challenge altogether and in June 2022, the very same year small hive beetle and flooding were having their way with Bee Services, varroa was detected 470km south in Newcastle. Then in July much closer, Nana Glen 60km away.
Rudder says they were mentally exhausted before varroa was found in NSW and news of its arrival “was just devastating”. However, Fuller is circumspect.
“We always accepted the fact we were going to get varroa and so when we did, it was no surprise,” he says.
“The timing could have been better though” Rudder points out.
“Another year, another honey flow, would have been good. But it is what it is.”
And again, the destruction was vast, as the industry undertook to eradicate the invader through euthanasia of infected, or nearby, colonies – an ultimately unsuccessful measure as the ectoparasite now moves across the county.
Fuller says 160 of their hives were killed because they sat inside an eradication zone. Another 1000 were in a surveillance zone and they were offered a cash payout to destroy them. With pollination contracts to fill, and having already witnessed so many of his bees killed, Fuller decided not to take the cheque.
That was a one-million-dollar mistake.
Continuous working and sampling of the bees left most of those colonies dead or near-dead, even though no varroa mites were found in the process.
“We agreed to keep monitoring for mites, not to move them, to keep feeding sugar as required, whatever we needed to do to keep them alive, because they were pollination hives. They would continually do surveillance on them though, sometimes three times a week, because one hand of the response wasn’t talking to the other and they were looking for things to do,” he says.
The response has now turned from one of eradication to management and at Bee Services that has meant varroa training for all the staff and selling a lot of equipment – including more than half a million dollars’ worth of trucks – to get cashed up.
“The business plan was to get leaner, so that we have the resources behind us to get through. We planned on having a bad time, which is what you have to do sometimes. You have to be ahead of the game to survive. And it is about survival mode for a lot of beekeepers,” Rudder says.
Survival Mode
Survival mode continues as the calendar turns to 2025, but the challenges faced down between 2019 and 2023 were surely enough to defeat many a person’s mind, body or business. Despite them, the business continues and they are welcoming a new generation into the fold.
Some have struggled, including Wayne’s brother Steve who suffered a stress-induced stroke amidst the pandemonium of the bush fires. He has recovered and returned to work, but some staff have not. The scene which greeted them on their return to fire ravaged environments have been particularly challenging.
“Steve walked in to a site and said the screams from the animals were eerie. We had one young fella who had been with us for four years who, after seeing what he saw, didn’t want to go back. He finished beekeeping,” Fuller says.
“Normally the bush is alive, birds squawking, possums fighting, but then it was quiet, except for the screams of animals in distress. I never want to go back to that.”
They have not been alone in their setbacks though, and helping other beekeepers motivates them.
“There were beekeepers on suicide watch, but generally the beekeeping community, especially amongst the older guys, is very tight. I definitely noticed the amount of phone calls they were making, just to check up on each other,” Rudder says of the varroa elimination period.
“There are times where you could just about sit down and cry, but you would keep on going,” Fuller admits of his own challenges through the worst of it.
“We like to keep an eye out for other beekeepers as well.”
Despite their setbacks, due to the size of their business and the success they have at times had, Fuller says others have been, astonishingly, known to comment on their good luck.
“People keep telling you how lucky you are, but it is not luck. It is 40 years of hard work. I tell people who ask, 'keep working on it'. We have a monthly plan, a six-monthly plan, and so on,” he says.
Those plans are made in family business meetings, where conversation is frank and to the point, but can still take a full day, such is the level of detail.
“The kids came back into the business after five bad years and varroa has just hit. We are hopeful though,” Rudder says.
“The kids and their partners had high paying jobs and if they didn’t see a future in beekeeping they would not have left those jobs,” Fuller says, adding “There is definitely hope at the other end.”
A note from Wayne and Janine: We would like to thank all who made us welcome in New Zealand and at the conference, especially Mary-Ann and Frank Lindsay and other beekeepers. Learning about varroa and how New Zealand was coping were the main reasons for our visit.
It is worth noting that beekeeper problems are the same wherever we go and detailed record keeping is the key to survival.
Comments