They are tiny insects with a vicious sting yet they produce one of the most common and sweetest food products known to man. Honey. Yes, we are talking about bees, a valuable gift from nature that keeps on giving. Ordinarily, bees are known for their important role as major pollinators accounting for every one in three spoonful of the food we eat globally, according to the United Nations Environment Programme.
As the world celebrated World Bee Day, it is not just their impact on the environment and human lives that took us to Nasaru-Olosho Conservancy in Amboseli in Kajiado County but another group of brave bee queens who’ve taken on an economic role that was predominantly done by men.
Nasaru-Olosho is an expansive land tucked along the verdant rolling Chyulu hills in the southern Kenyan wildlife corridor next to the Amboseli National Park where pastoralist farmers have agreed to merge their individual ranches in a bid to establish a system that allows coexistence with wildlife within the protected area.
Through innovative approaches to management of the integrated working landscape, the people are quickly adopting new ways to ensure that they live in harmony with nature, living true to the meaning of Nasaru-Olosho, a name that means ‘rescuing a community.’
To help Nasaru-Olosho Conservancy achieve its vision of securing a healthy landscape that is mutually beneficial to the local people and wildlife, WWF-Kenya initiated several projects in the conservancy, including the provision of 1,200 beehives in Maasai Mara, Amboseli and Tsavo conservancies for women groups and training on bee husbandry.
Among the first beneficiaries of the beehives and beekeeping training were members of the Nalepo Women Self-Help Group.
When we went to Kimana village for training on beehive husbandry, everyone in the community was taken by surprise to see us suited up in the sting proof bee suits and harvesting honey in daytime something that was unheard of in the community,
said Jane Mosoni, one of the first women at Nasaru Olosho to receive training on beekeeping through her Nalepo Women Self-Help Group.
Everything is about learning and a little training. With time, the young girls will also learn beekeeping and other activities. It is all about learning,” said Jane.
“We would like the number of beehives increased, possibly by the government, to enable us reap an even bigger reward in this new practice,” said Leah Lasiti, another member of the Nalepo group.
The women’s venturing into the beekeeping enterprise has received warm support from the community
The conservancy is located in three locations in Kajiado County and is home to about 15,000 people who have been sharing the land with wildlife in the busy Southern Kenya corridor.
For a long time, this area has been rife with human-wildlife conflict between landowners, livestock and key wildlife species especially lions, elephants and hyenas.