The beehive beneath my office window quietly exhales
legions of busybodies and then inhales them. On summer afternoons, when
the sun seeps under the trees to backlight the hive, the approaching
sunlit bees zoom into their tiny dark opening like curving tracer
bullets. I watch them now as they haul in the last gleanings of nectar
from the final manzanita blooms of the year. Soon the rains will come
and the bees will hide. I will still gaze out the window as I write;
they will still toil, but now in their dark home. Only on the balmiest
day will I be blessed by the sight of their thousands in the sun.
Over years of beekeeping, I've tried my hand at relocating bee
colonies out of buildings and trees as a quick and cheap way of starting
new hives at home. One fall I gutted a bee tree that a neighbor felled.
I took a chain saw and ripped into this toppled old tupelo. The poor
tree was cancerous with bee comb. The further I cut into the belly of
the tree, the more bees I found. The insects filled a cavity as large as
I was. It was a gray, cool autumn day and all the bees were home, now
agitated by the surgery. I finally plunged my hand into the mess of
comb. Hot! Ninety-five degrees at least. Overcrowded with 100,000
cold-blooded bees, the hive had become a warm-blooded organism. The
heated honey ran like thin, warm blood. My gut felt like I had reached
my hand into a dying animal.
The idea of the collective hive as an animal was an idea late in
coming. The Greeks and Romans were famous beekeepers who harvested
respectable yields of honey from homemade hives, yet these ancients got
almost every fact about bees wrong. Blame it on the lightless conspiracy
of bee life, a secret guarded by ten thousand fanatically loyal, armed
soldiers. Democritus thought bees spawned from the same source as
maggots. Xenophon figured out the queen bee but erroneously assigned her
supervisory responsibilities she doesn't have. Aristotle gets good marks
for getting a lot right, including the semiaccurate observation that
"ruler bees" put larva in the honeycomb cells. (They actually start out
as eggs, but at least he corrects Democritus's misguided direction of
maggot origins.) Not until the Renaissance was the female gender of the
queen bee proved, or beeswax shown to be secreted from the undersides of
bees. No one had a clue until modern genetics that a hive is a radical
matriarchy and sisterhood: all bees, except the few good-for-nothing
drones, are female and sisters. The hive was a mystery as unfathomable
as an eclipse.
I've seen eclipses and I've seen bee swarms. Eclipses are spectacles
I watch halfheartedly, mostly out of duty, I think, to their rarity and
tradition, much as I might attend a Fourth of July parade. Bee swarms,
on the other hand, evoke another sort of awe. I've seen more than a few
hives throwing off a swarm, and never has one failed to transfix me
utterly, or to dumbfound everyone else within sight of it.
A hive about to swarm is a hive possessed. It becomes visibly
agitated around the mouth of its entrance. The colony whines in a
centerless loud drone that vibrates the neighborhood. It begins to spit
out masses of bees, as if it were emptying not only its guts but its
soul. A poltergeist-like storm of tiny wills materializes over the hive
box. It grows to be a small dark cloud of purpose, opaque with life.
Boosted by a tremendous buzzing racket, the ghost slowly rises into the
sky, leaving behind the empty box and quiet bafflement. The German
theosophist Rudolf Steiner writes lucidly in his otherwise kooky Nine
Lectures on Bees: "Just as the human soul takes leave of the body...one
can truly see in the flying swarm an image of the departing human soul."
For many years Mark Thompson, a beekeeper local to my area, had the
bizarre urge to build a Live-In Hive -- an active bee home you could visit
by inserting your head into it. He was working in a yard once when a
beehive spewed a swarm of bees "like a flow of black lava, dissolving,
then taking wing." The black cloud coalesced into a 20-foot-round black
halo of 30,000 bees that hovered, UFO-like, six feet off the ground,
exactly at eye level. The flickering insect halo began to drift slowly
away, keeping a constant six feet above the earth. It was a Live-In Hive
dream come true.
Mark didn't waver. Dropping his tools he slipped into the swarm, his
bare head now in the eye of a bee hurricane. He trotted in sync across
the yard as the swarm eased away. Wearing a bee halo, Mark hopped over
one fence, then another. He was now running to keep up with the
thundering animal in whose belly his head floated. They all crossed the
road and hurried down an open field, and then he jumped another fence.
He was tiring. The bees weren't; they picked up speed. The swarm-bearing
man glided down a hill into a marsh. The two of them now resembled a
superstitious swamp devil, humming, hovering, and plowing through the
miasma. Mark churned wildly through the muck trying to keep up. Then, on
some signal, the bees accelerated. They unhaloed Mark and left him
standing there wet, "in panting, joyful amazement." Maintaining an
eye-level altitude, the swarm floated across the landscape until it
vanished, like a spirit unleashed, into a somber pine woods across the
highway.
"Where is 'this spirit of the hive'...where does it reside?" asks the
author Maurice Maeterlinck as early as 1901. "What is it that governs
here, that issues orders, foresees the future...?" We are certain now it
is not the queen bee. When a swarm pours itself out through the front
slot of the hive, the queen bee can only follow. The queen's daughters
manage the election of where and when the swarm should settle. A
half-dozen anonymous workers scout ahead to check possible hive
locations in hollow trees or wall cavities. They report back to the
resting swarm by dancing on its contracting surface. During the report,
the more theatrically a scout dances, the better the site she is
championing. Deputy bees then check out the competing sites according to
the intensity of the dances, and will concur with the scout by joining
in the scout's twirling. That induces more followers to check out the
lead prospects and join the ruckus when they return by leaping into the
performance of their choice.
It's a rare bee, except for the scouts, who has inspected more than
one site. The bees see a message, "Go there, it's a nice place." They go
and return to dance/say, "Yeah, it's really nice." By compounding
emphasis, the favorite sites get more visitors, thus increasing further
visitors. As per the law of increasing returns, them that has get more
votes, the have-nots get less. Gradually, one large, snowballing finale
will dominate the dance-off. The biggest crowd wins.
It's an election hall of idiots, for idiots, and by idiots, and it
works marvelously. This is the true nature of democracy and of all
distributed governance. At the close of the curtain, by the choice of
the citizens, the swarm takes the queen and thunders off in the
direction indicated by mob vote. The queen who follows, does so humbly.
If she could think, she would remember that she is but a mere peasant
girl, blood sister of the very nurse bee instructed (by whom?) to select
her larva, an ordinary larva, and raise it on a diet of royal jelly,
transforming Cinderella into the queen. By what karma is the larva for a
princess chosen? And who chooses the chooser?
"The hive chooses," is the disarming answer of William Morton
Wheeler, a natural philosopher and entomologist of the old school, who
founded the field of social insects. Writing in a bombshell of an essay
in 1911 ("The Ant Colony as an Organism" in the Journal of Morphology),
Wheeler claimed that an insect colony was not merely the analog of an
organism, it is indeed an organism, in every important and scientific
sense of the word. He wrote: "Like a cell or the person, it behaves as a
unitary whole, maintaining its identity in space, resisting
dissolution...neither a thing nor a concept, but a continual flux or
process."
It was a mob of 20,000 united into oneness.
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