Winter viruses and the wettest August for years have combined to leave Britain’s beehives dry In 26 years of beekeeping, Ged Marshall has never seen anything as bad as the 2008 honey harvest. A miserable summer that has confined his bees to their hives following a winter bedevilled by deadly viruses means that production this year will be barely a third of its usual level of around five tonnes of honey. Unfortunately for the nation’s honey lovers and apiarists, Mr Marshall’s experience is far from unique. According to the British Beekeepers’ Association (BBKA), up to a third of Britain’s 240,000 hives failed to survive last winter and spring due to disease and poor weather. The result is a drop of more than 50 per cent in honey production across the country. Rowse, the UK’s biggest honey supplier, warned yesterday that the harvest has been so poor that major supermarkets will run out of stocks of English honey before Christmas. A global shortfall in production from Argentina to Australia has also driven up raw honey prices by 60 per cent in the last 12 months. Mr Marshall, 53, who keeps more than 500 hives around the country […]

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