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  • The History of the Buckfast Bee

  • General Q&A, Bee chat and only Bee chat please
General Q&A, Bee chat and only Bee chat please
 #9256  by NigelP
 15 Oct 2020, 16:10
I'm fed up with people misunderstanding Buckfast bees and various lines that are kept going by many dedicated Buckfast bee breeders. Their crosses can all be followed, as each breeder has to record them and make them publicly available.
Part of the misunderstanding is due to their being breeders using isolated mating stations, islands II etc to ensure their crosses are between set Buckfast Lines such as, Anatolica Breeder, Caucasica Breeder, Carpatica-combination Breeder, Mellifera (black-brown) Breeder and many others. These guys breed Buckfast with Buckfast. Most are in other parts of Europe as few isolated mating stations in the UK.
If you want one their queens it will cost you over a £150 pounds. These are what I used to breed my queens from. So the progeny of these queens in my area are open mated and although the 1st generation progeny are all pure Buckfast the sperm those queens are now carrying is mainly mongrel. These are what I call F1.
These are the type of queens many UK breeders are selling you. They buy in Island mated queens and open mate them....these are usually £35-50 a pop and are what most beekeepers buy in, often from dodgy dealers importing in large numbers from abroad..

Hopefully that has explained that part.

Next post is going to be lengthy as I'm going to share with you the potted history of Brother Adam and the Buckfast bee. As you will see the original cross was Lingusta/Amm and further Amm (from France) was introduced into the line in 1930. Anyone claiming Amm is not a part of the Buckfast genome should save their breath for cooling their porridge.
Lots of lines were produced before getting crossed back into the main Buckfast line. It is some of these lines that exist today and are maintained by many of the "proper" Buckfast breeders that they are using to advance the Buckfast heritage . This also what leads to a lot of the confusion in thinking Buckfast is only one type of bee. There are many Buckfast lines with different characteristics, just as there are many mongrel bees in the UK with different characteristics. Or any other race of bee come to think of it. Brother Adam never finished producing the ideal Buckfast, this is left to the dedicated breeders of today.
Last edited by NigelP on 15 Oct 2020, 17:38, edited 5 times in total.
 #9257  by NigelP
 15 Oct 2020, 16:14
Grab a cup of tea and expect a lengthy read here. :D


1900

March 1910
He enters the benedictine monastery, Buckfast Abbey
The abbey, rebuilt in 1882, owns an apiary with a majority of hives of British dark bee stock.

1913 The acarine disease (tracheal mite), coming from the Isle of Wight reaches the U.K. and decimates the bee populations in the area.
1915
Brother Adam, for health reason, is chosen as Brother Columban's assistant in the monastery's apiary. In fall, the County apicultural inspector predicts the total extermination of the bees for the coming spring.
1916
Inspired by his own observations of foreign strains resistance to acarine disease, he imagines the first sketch of what will become the Buckfast Bee That was really a general disaster. In the monastery's apiary, 16 colonies out of 46 survive and these are populated with A. m. carnica and ligustica. All the native bees had died.
1917
First step in the Buckfast stock by crossing : brown ligustica x drones of the vanished British bee.
The apiary is now 100 hives strong by late fall.
1919
Brother Columban steps down and Brother Adam is in full charge of the apiary on September 1st.
1920
He is inspired by Prof. Armbuster's Bienenzüchtungskunde [Bee breeding, a science, an art !], just published (1919) First attempts of crossing F1 with A. m. cypria.
1922
He realises that bee drifting is the result of the hives' alignment. The hives are arranged in groups of four with their entrances facing cardinal points.
1924
He's convinced that queens must have enough laying area, without any barrier. This summer, he modified half of his British standard frames hives (2 supers of 10 frames) into Dadant 12 frames.
1925
He established his famous mating station on Dartmoor. It is a model of isolation and allows desired selective crossings.
It is still operating today. In June-July the mating station is fully occupied with 520 mating nucs on Dadant half frames. These nucs winter on the spot so that the queens undergo a severe control before being introduced the coming March into the 320 production hives.
1930
He designs and improves a new combination. Crossing a French queen from S-W of Paris with drones from the Buckfast stock. Later, this combination was considered very noteworthy.
At this time, all the production populations are on Dadant 12 frames hives, with a comfortable brood nest.
1940
After 10 years of severe selection, Brother Adam decides to introduce a new combination in the Buckfast stock The Buckfast stock receives the above new combination.
1948
Collaboration with Dr. O. Mackenson, one of the discoverers of instrumental insemination (I.I.). The I.I. is performed at Buckfast for selected queens.
1950
He undertakes his first research travel in Europe : to France, Switzerland, Austria, Italy, Sicily and Germany. Bee watching on the entire old continent, in their natural biotope, in their original environment, allows him to assess their qualities, to choose on the spot, specimens which will be tested in the Dartmoor climate before an (eventual) incorporation into the Buckfast stock.
For example ...
1952
Then goes to Algeria, Israël, Jordan, Syria, Libya, Cyprus, Greece, Crete, Slovenia and the Ligurian Alps. Crossing with the A. m. cecropia
1954
And then to Turkey and Aegean islands.
1956
In the former Yugoslavia.
1958
He introduces into his main stock a new combination of Greek origin.
1959
His trips continue to Spain and Portugal. The Buckfast stock receives the above crossing, clearly less aggressive and with less swarming behavior than the basic stock.
1960
The Buckfast Bee is enriched with a cross of A. m. anatolia x buckfast stock, a new crossing which will be tested for many years.
1962
Travels through Morocco, Turkey, Greece, former Yugoslavia, Egypt and Libya.
1964
He is chosen as a council member of the Bee Research Association (future IBRA)
1967
He incorporates into the main Buckfast stock a new combination of anatolian origin. The above combination, more resistant and thrifty, is definitively incorporated into the Buckfast stock.
1971
Brother Adam becomes an IBRA Vice-President. The IBRA council, which chose him, points out that he does not ask admission, probably because he is one of the best known beekeepers in the world.
1972
Travels continue, returning to Turkey, Greece, and the former Yugoslavia
1973
On June 16th, Brother Adam has been created an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the Queen's Birthday Honours List.
1974
On May 13th, he received the Bundesverdienstkreuz in the German Federal Republic.
1976-1977
Still searching, in Morocco, then in Greece.
1982
Returning to Greece, to the peninsula of Mount Athos - The Holy Mountain. Beginning of tests with the new very promising combination with the old Macedonian Athos bee.
1983
Travel in Greece and to the island of Crete.
1984
Goes to the US. to control and correct the Buckfast breeding program, which was diverging, if not failing.
1984 to 1995 to be complete

1987
On October 2nd, Brother Adam was awarded an honorary doctorate in recognition of his services to beekeeping by the Faculty of Agriculture, Uppsala University, Sweden. The news reaches him during his travel in Africa in search of the scutellata and the monticola bee (Kilimanjaro mountains in Tanzania and Kenya).
This recognition deeply moves him for it is for him the official mark of the scientific nature of his research. Beginning of tests with scutellata and monticola bees.

1989
On the morning of 13 July, he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science, honoris causa, in recognition of his services to beekeeping by the Faculty of Agriculture, Exeter University (Devon, UK). See the presentation oration by Prof. Michael J. Swanton. .
1992
February 2d.. Compelled resignation by the new abbot David Charlesworth who refuses to award the nomination of a new technical assistant Michael van der Zee.
The honey flow is so poor that Brother Adam is deprived of his daily spoonful of honey.
Deeply hurt, this 94 year old man spends summer and fall in his native area, Mittelbiberach, with his niece Maria Kehrle. Abbey apiary's harvest is extremely poor: some 3000 pounds for the 320 production hives.
1993
Faithfull to his monastic obligations, Brother Adam, the oldest member of the monastic community, not even at Buckfast, but for the whole St. Benoit Order (O.S.B.), comes back to Buckfast Abbey for a sadful life of isolation , in the indifference of the other monks. The responsibility of one of the greatest bee genetics bank is left to Brother Leo, a retired abbot, 70 years old, without any knowledge in bee rearing.
The job lands on Peter Donovan, former Brother Adam's assistant.
Anxiety amongst numerous Buckfast bee breeders
1995
Brother Adam is retired, he's frail as always but very alert. He is no longer in charge of the beekeeping at Buckfast Abbey. He lives quietly in a rest house, very near, down the road The Abbey beekeeping is managed by Peter Donovan, who is not a monk but has worked with the bees at Buckfast for about 40 years himself as Brother Adam's apiary manager. Peter has asked a few local beekeepers to help out with some routine management this season.
(from Glyn Davies, Ashburton, Devon, UK)
1996, September 1
Peter Donovan, who worked closely with Brother Adam at Buckfast Abbey, passes on the message on the net: Brother Adam died on this September 1, aged 98. Loaded by the genes he incorporated in His Honeybee as well as The Methods he recommended will survive for ever.
September 7th
A full abbey church at Buckfast Abbey said a final good-bye to Brother Adam. All participants in the funeral ceremony paid tribute to one of the greatest personalities within beekeeping history.
An era within beekeeping came to an end.

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 #9260  by Chrisbarlow
 15 Oct 2020, 17:45
An interesting read. Cheers Nigel
 #9265  by Bobbysbees
 15 Oct 2020, 20:50
Very interesting read. I found a short series of films on youtube covering some of Brother Adam's work and life its well worth a watch.
Titled "The Monk and the Honeybee"
Some great footage and remarks on his African travels.