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The Rural Voice, 2005-10, Page 37Murray Fear stands in front of barrels of honey. some of the 35 tonnes of an average yearly crop. KEEPING THE HONEY FLOWING Beekeeping is an ancient form of farmin,g but today only a handful of Ontario farmers make their living from it Story and photos by Keith Rouston This summer's hot humid weather has made for a happy harvest at J. R. Fear Apiaries at Wingham. The weather provided plenty of flowers with plenty of nectar for the tiny workers that keep the honey flowing for Murray Fear, who runs the long-time family business. Last year was a different story. The wet cool weather was disastrous for the honey crop. Fear recalls how his bees, taken to a local orchard to help with pollination, wouldn't travel more than 150 yards from the hives in the cool weather that spring. This year's weather, however, was the kind that makes alfalfa, the main crop for Fear's bees, yield best. The high humidity keeps the flowers from drying out, he says. In dry weather the flowers dry out by early afternoon and the bees stop calling. The result k a bumper crop from 32 THE RURAL VOICE the 700 hives he puts out at locations within a 30 -mile radius of his honey house on the edge of Wingham. Though alfalfa is the main source of the nectar the bees turn into honey, they also feed on wildflowers, basswood blossoms and clover in pastures. Murray Fear is the second generation to make honey a full-time occupation. His father J. Russell Fear got his first hives when he was 15 years of age. By 1973 he was making his living from honey. Commercial beekeeping is not common in Ontario. Fear says only he and Bill Ferguson of Ferguson's Apiaries in Hensall, make their living from honey in Huron County. In a reversal of the common trend in agriculture which sees more animals kept by fewer farmers, in beekeeping The on-farm store includes a collection of historic honey pails. r.