Learn system-savvy beekeeping
so you can set your bees up for survival and help build a broader movement
to tip our systems towards resilience
THIS IS HOW WE KEEP THEM is an online course for beekeepers
who know the status quo isn’t working and want to build
a different future for their bees.
September 9, 16, 23 and 30 | 4:30-6pm Mountain time on Zoom*
*click here for group sign-up options
Colony loss can feel like a personal failing.
After all, as beekeepers it’s our job to help our bees stay healthy. But the widespread, large-scale collapse of honey bee colonies in the U.S. and around the world? The fact that it’s this hard to keep your bees alive? That is not a you problem. It’s a systems issue.
It’s not that beekeeping is supposed to be easy. Tending to a superorganism is inherently complex. But the run-of-the-mill beekeeping challenges that could once be addressed with a few technical tweaks? They’ve been complicated exponentially by changes in the systems that surround us. The ecosystems, the agricultural systems, the beekeeping systems.
If you’re a seasoned beekeeper, there’s a good chance you’ve seen first-hand that the systems that surround you aren’t working for your bees.
The good news is: it doesn’t have to be this way.
THIS IS HOW WE KEEP THEM — our signature course for small- and mid-scale beekeepers — helps you connect the challenges you face in your apiary to large-scale, systems issues so you can get clear on what it takes to make real change.
It helps you identify concrete, community-based strategies so you can set your bees up for survival AND contribute to long-term, collective resilience.
AND it helps you break that daunting work of systems change into manageable action steps so that you feel grounded, clear, and capable as you orient towards action.
Join us for this live, four-part virtual course, beginning September 9.
We start the course with three teaching modules, each consisting of:
An interactive, 30-minute presentation to get us all on the same page
A concrete action step so that we can get started taking action, together
Discussion time, where we work together to connect high-level concepts to your particular context
We close the course with a full-on discussion module, so that you can troubleshoot the additional action steps you plan to implement in your area.
Here’s what we get into:
All modules are recorded and available to you indefinitely.
Plus, when you register for THIS IS HOW WE KEEP THEM, you also get:
Access to a customizable, evidence-based Resilience Library so that you can translate your knowledge into action
A 10% discount on one-on-one consults so that we can troubleshoot together as you implement your action plan
Priority access to Sweet Spot services, so your beekeeping group can get the support you need to shift conditions in your local area.
Our beta price is $249.
Two ways to sign up for this course:
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Sign up as an individual and join a cohort of resilience-building beekeepers from different parts of the country
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Coordinate with other beekeepers in your area and sign up as a group, so that we can dig into the specifics of your local context.
Minimum 8 people per group.
Submit an inquiry here.
Here’s what people are saying about our work:
“With one foot in the research world and another in the bee yard, Maggie and Héctor draw on scientific expertise and hands-on beekeeping experience to assemble clear, compelling action steps for beekeepers making a bid for resilience in the U.S. and around the world.”
Mark Winston, honey bee researcher and author of Bee Time: Lessons from the Hive“This course really addresses the problem of industrialized beekeeping and centers the resilience of bees in its approach, while providing real and tangible steps towards improving the existing beekeeping systems we operate within.”
Gia Biaocchi, Chief Operating Officer, Apis Arborea“Maggie and Héctor are exactly the voices beekeeping needs right now. Grassroots researchers and activists with a rare gift for translating cutting-edge science into clear, practical strategies that beekeepers can actually use. Their message is both innovative and deeply hopeful, and it holds real promise for healing honeybees.”
Michael Thiele, Founder & Executive Director, Apis Arborea
Get to know your teacher
Hi there! I’m Maggie. You might know me as the bee researcher asking the dangerous questions about honey bee health and industrial agriculture.
I take the lead on our English-language courses, and Héctor facilitates our Spanish-language offerings.
I’ve been digging into the way beekeepers can shift the systems we’re in for five years now, and it’s changed my approach to beekeeping completely.
I’m excited to bring you THIS IS HOW WE KEEP THEM so that together we can use systems thinking strategies to move the needle on honey bee health.
Wondering if this course is for you? Check if these things resonate:
If you’ve ever felt powerless to stop the rising tide of colony loss…
If you’ve wondered if you’re doing right by your bees…
If you struggle to navigate the wide-ranging recommendations that roam the internet…
Or if you feel you’ve tried them all (and they still weren’t enough)…
If you’ve found practices that work well for your bees, and you wish they were more widely adopted…
If you’re tracking collapse in the systems that surround you…
If you know in your bones that something needs to change…
And if, amidst all this, the magic of the hive lights something up inside of you…
And you want to connect with like-minded beekeepers…
If you can sense new beekeeping paradigms bursting onto the scene…
And if you want to be part of the movement that helps bring them through…
…then THIS IS HOW WE KEEP THEM is for you.
Frequently Asked Questions
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We think it’s a great idea for beginners to ground themselves in systems thinking right from the start of their beekeeping journey. That said, this course is designed for beekeepers with several years’ experience. You’ll need a working knowledge of bee biology and a general familiarity with common beekeeping terms and practices in order to make the most of the concepts we share.
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It does not! Our priority in this course is to help you to build the skills you need to determine which practices work best for your bees. Our Resilience Library does include some resources around implementation, but our focus here is what to do (more specifically, how to know what to do!), not how to do it. If you’re looking for hands-on help, drop us a line! We’re happy to help direct you towards technical, hands-on beekeeping resources.
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Sadly, we cannot. Because colony loss is a systems issue, the stressors our bees face are often beyond our control. This means that even the most thoughtful, the most considered, the most airtight management plan can’t guarantee that your bees will survive. Our goal with this course is to help you understand the big-picture factors that impact your bees, and take steps to reduce exposure and increase resilience. We do firmly believe that systems-savvy beekeeping improves outcomes over time. But colony health is a complex thing. There is no silver bullet, and there are likely to be losses along the way.
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One of our central goals is to build towards a future where honey bees manage pests and pathogens — successfully — on their own (aka, without beekeeper intervention, aka treatment-free). In this course, we cover steps beekeepers can take to decrease disease exposure, increase bees’ access to health-supportive natural behaviors, and reduce dependence on treatments.
We don’t encourage treatment-free beekeeping in all contexts, at all times. Instead, we discuss where treatment-free beekeeping can support the emergence of mite-resistant traits, and where it actually undermines that process.
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The examples we draw from in this course are centered in beekeeping experiences in the U.S. and Mexico, but we feel the concepts we share are broadly applicable. Industrialization impacts beekeepers in much of the world, and systems thinking supports resilience everywhere. On top of that, gathering with a diverse group gives us all more opportunity to learn from each other.
If you are joining us from outside the U.S., be sure to indicate this on your intake form so we can prepare course materials accordingly.
All that said, we are in the process of preparing a Spanish-language course geared primarily towards folks working with European-scutellata hybrid bees ( also called ”Africanized bees”) in Mexico and Latin America. If you feel this course would be a better fit for you, make sure to sign up for our email list, and keep an eye out for this offering.
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Great to hear you’re interested! Two options here. You can sign up for our email list, and we’ll let you know when our next set of dates rolls around. Or, you can sign up as group.
Beekeepers signing up in groups of 8 or more can propose their own set of dates.
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Our first three modules are teaching modules. These consist of 30 minutes of teaching time, an action step we work through together, and time for Q&A and discussion.
Our final module is discussion-based. In this module, we’ll troubleshoot the additional action steps you’ve decided to pursue and make sure you’re set up to put resilience into practice.
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Not a problem! You can always catch up with the recording. Session recordings and accompanying action steps will be available on our class Notion page shortly after each session concludes.
Ready to sign up for THIS IS HOW WE KEEP THEM?
If you’ve made it all the way down here, this is what we want you to know:
Systems change can be daunting, but you are not in this alone. When we pull together, when we take honest stock of the systems we’re in and organize our actions accordingly, we can make real, measurable change.