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Jaron Summers © 2008 |
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Coronation stories & essays.
Coronation
Mr. Adcock, who kept bees, lived a block from our home in Coronation, in
the center of the Alberta plains.
I was 14 years old and decided to raise bees so I bought a few books and
talked to Mr. Adcock, who was about 75. The year was 1956.
Every spring Mr. Adcock would buy bundles of bees, each containing an
Italian queen, and dump them into his hives.
Then in the fall he would kill them and take their honey.
There was about a six month season when the bees worked furiously to
produce enough honey to make it through the winter that they knew was
coming, even though they had just arrived from out of town.
A pound of bees with an Italian queen cost seven dollars. You had to buy
supers (the hollow boxes you pile on top of each other to build the hive.)
You also needed racks with sheets of wax in it. You drop these in the
supers, and the bees extrude the wax and fill it with honey.
Oh, you also had to get the honey into jars.
You would take out the racks, use a hot knife to cut off the ends of the
wax cells and then the honey would run out.
Mr. Adcock had a centrifuge—a gadget that spun the racks. Honey would
splatter onto the inside of a barrel and run down the inside and you could
drain it off.
Here is a short video of the process.
In my best year I harvested a thousand pounds of honey and I sold it for
25 cent a pound.
Not counting my time, the use of my father's car, Mr. Adcock's machinery,
taking my dog to the vet after he nearly got stung to death, I almost
broke even but I learned things:
1.
2.
The best
place was Mrs. Selfors' farm. There were lots of wild flowers and acres
of clover. Mrs. Selfors was my high school English teacher.
3.
I had just killed my bees
with cyanide, it had snowed early, and I was taking a rack of honey to Mrs. Selfors'.
She liked it in the comb.
I was feeling
badly that I had murdered all my bees and stolen their honey and I
worried that some of them might be alive, following me in the dusk.
(Although killer bees did not exist then, I imagined them anyway.)
A new moon shone in the pale night air.
As I
was walking past some shrubs, almost to Mrs. Selfors' door, a shaking
thing busted out of the bushes and screamed at me.
It was not a giant bee.
It was a naked crazy man and he went for my throat.
Luckily for me he was wearing a dog collar on his neck that was attached
to a heavy chain.
When the
shaking wild man was one inch from me, the heavy chain jerked him back
on his ass.
Mrs. Selfors ran outside and, using a broom, beat him back
into the bushes.
She told me not to discuss what had happened with the other kids at
school.
I never quite figured out what the wild man
was doing in my teacher's bushes.
I think he was a relative who was simply out
of his head and they kept him at home, other than put him in some kind of
asylum.
The asylums in Alberta were awful places.
Anyway I told my teacher I would keep our secret, even though I longed to
tell my friends about the crazy shaking man chained under the bushes in
our English teacher's yard.
I mentioned it to Mr. Adcock and said I thought maybe bee stings would
calm down the wild man.
He asked me if I wanted to be a beekeeper or a writer.
I said a
writer.
He said:
"Keep your mouth shut, stay on the good side of your English
teacher, and forget about wild men."
For many years
I was able to follow this advice.
But then I came
to Hollywood to write screenplays. Here there are wild men (and wild
women) everywhere.
They are called producers and even when they are
asleep they are much more dangerous than the guy who lived in Mrs. Selfors’ bushes.
Tragically, almost none of the producers here wear collars with chains
while they are at work.
So there is not much to restrain them.
They make a lot of B movies.
Below is a terrific Skit
by
John Cleese about bees.
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