Re: Dinner Tonight, 1/31/2025

Liste des GroupesRevenir à rf cooking 
Sujet : Re: Dinner Tonight, 1/31/2025
De : cshenk (at) *nospam* virginia-beach.com (Carol)
Groupes : rec.food.cooking
Date : 04. Feb 2025, 23:11:25
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vnu3ad$21ll7$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
User-Agent : XanaNews/1.21-f3fb89f (x86; Portable ISpell)
Dave Smith wrote:

On 2025-02-03 11:25 a.m., Janet wrote:
In article <nbg57l-van.ln1@anthive.com>,
 
 
 
 
  i have not talked to the beekeeper - i've talked to the
land-owner
 
  Ah, that wasn't clear.
 
   Above, you said the hives were placed on your property
without your permission, and have blocked access to your
property and left a mess on it.
 
  Now you're saying its not your property, the hives
 (and the associated mess you complain of) are on land
owned by a neighbour.
 
 
 
 
It's all pretty vague. I was under the impression that it was the
edge of his property not on it, which left me wondering how it could
block access to his property. 

The bees do. If he's allergic, he can't go back there without an
epi-pen.

I was also under the impression that
the other property owner had given someone permission to put the hive
on his property.

On their own property, legal but not allowed to be as close as it was
placed.

to put their hives on other people's farms. I don't know for sure who
pays who, whether it is the farmer who pays the beekeeper to bring
his hives to pollinate the crops or if the beekeeper pays the farmer
for his bees' access to the flowering crop.

Not exactly.  If you have a crop that needs bees to pollenate, you can
(for a fee) 'rent a hive'.


Date Sujet#  Auteur
7 Jun 25 o 

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