The Dandelion & the Bee
Since I was a girl, I’ve loved dandelions. Bright splashes of color across a field- what’s not to like?
Dandelions provided hours of fun for me as a kid. They were magic wands & floating boats. You could weave them into a crown of flowers, decorate the spokes of your bike wheels, or turn a puddle into flower soup. Then all of a sudden the dandelions turned into fuzzy puff balls that you could send flying through the air with a breath.
And remember, “Mama had a baby & her head popped off!”- then you’d use your thumb to pop off the flower? OK, that sounds kind of sadistic now that I’m old enough to notice. But at the time, decapitating dandelions was about as cool as it got.
I understand not everyone shares my love of the humble dandelion. Some call it a pernicious weed. A pox on a manicured lawn. To each his own. But before you bust out the weed killer, consider this: in the early spring, when other flowers are scarce, dandelions provide crucial nutrients to bees. And bees could use a little help.
Over the past 50 years, wild & domesticated bee populations have been cut in half due to invasive mites & pesticides. Bees don’t just make delicious honey. They are the unsung helper to the American farmer. Many fruit, nut, vegetable, legume, & seed crops depend on bee pollination.
So I say we (re)learn to enjoy the spritely yellow dandelion & give our worker bees something to snack on till summer.
Long live the dandelion & the bee!
-m
Read more at Suite101: The Honey Bee Crisis: Decline in Honey Bee Population Worries Farmers


