Honey and venom Confessions of an urban beekeeper

Andrew Coté

Book - 2020

"Andrew Coté has one of the most intriguing, challenging, and unique jobs in New York City--maintaining millions of honey bees atop some of the city's most iconic buildings. His apiaries have crowned the Waldorf Astoria and the Museum of Modern Art; reside on the North Lawn of the United Nations; reign above stores, hotels, restaurants, schools, churches, and synagogues; and are situated in community gardens, and even cemeteries, throughout the five boroughs. Widely recognized as New York City's premier urban beekeeper, in this debut collection, Coté takes readers with him on his daily apiary adventures over the course of a year, in the city and across the globe ..."

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Andrew Coté (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvi, 295 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781524799045
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Coté is a celebrity beekeeper, counting Martha Stewart, Instagram influencer Eva Chen, and conceptual artist Pierre Huyghe as confidantes and clients. But Coté is also an advocate. A fourth-generation beekeeper, he's amassed a treasure trove of wisdom, and doles it out as leader of the New York City Beekeepers Association and Bees without Borders (a nonprofit that trains underserved international communities to keep apiaries with the goal of alleviating poverty). In Honey and Venom, each chapter represents a month, and the anecdotes that make up the essays describe situations Coté confronted during that month at some point during his notable career. His most charming stories bookend the text, and both take place in Africa. In "January," Coté describes language barriers and an angry swarm in Uganda; in "December," he describes the hard work and humanity of a beekeeping program he developed in Kenya. While the text is sprinkled with some advice for novice beekeepers, Honey and Venom is best read as a memoir--and a sweet one at that.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this delightful debut, New York City beekeeper Coté recounts a year of raising bees and the big adventures these tiny insects have brought to his life. In his 20s with a cushy professorship, Coté chucked it all to turn his honey-making hobby into his career. Following in the footsteps of his Quebecois father, a firefighter turned professional beekeeper, Coté becomes an expert apiarist in the Big Apple, placing and tending to bees all over the five boroughs and helping to get beekeeping legalized in New York City. Along the way, he starts Bees Without Borders, a nonprofit that promotes beekeeping in third world countries; helps create a bee sculpture for MoMA; works with the NYPD to capture swarms of bees; and travels to Iraq where he talks with religious Iraqi residents who take exception to the fact that a queen bee "copulates with many drones." Throughout, he writes sweetly about the life cycle of the honey bee and praises his father, who "holds more information about bees in one hair of his white moustache than I will ever know." Honey farmers and urban naturalists will be buzzing about this one. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Coté could possibly claim the title of Beekeeper to the Stars, having worked with Spike Lee and Michelle Obama, among others. These star encounters are sprinkled in among Coté's musings on a year in the life of an urban beekeeper. As founder of Bees Without Borders, an organization dedicated to promoting beekeeping as an antidote to poverty, Coté also provides consultations to potential beekeepers on this ancient art. Readers travel with him to Uganda, Haiti, Ecuador, Iraq, and through all five boroughs of New York as he instructs on beekeeping best practices. Framed by the calendar year, the book shows the complete honey-making cycle, and introduces some of the eccentric characters that make up his New York beekeeping community. Coté also shares his exploits as one of the best-known beekeepers in the community; he is routinely called in to consult on many interesting cases, and we, the lucky readers, get to hear some of them in this charming read. VERDICT Fascinating, not only for the beekeeping information, but also for the urban-wildlife interactions involving bees. A good companion for anyone contemplating apiculture.--Diana Hartle, Univ. of Georgia Science Lib., Athens

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

New York City's "premier beekeeper" has some stories to tell. Coté structures his book around the beekeeping calendar, one chapter per month, weaving seasonally relevant facts about bees around stories that occurred during that month. In March, for instance, the author informs readers of the "cleansing flight," made when the weather is finally warm enough for pent-up bees to leave their hives and defecate, and the life cycle of the worker bee, as the hive ramps up its population in anticipation of spring blooms. He also documents the March 2010 debate on legalizing beekeeping in New York City and a mishap involving the relocation of several hives from western Pennsylvania to Brooklyn. This latter anecdote begins with a sneering and entirely gratuitous description of the trailer home and dilapidated equipment of the retiring Appalachian beekeeper, whom he snidely calls "the feller," from whom he purchased some 100 hives. It concludes with his mocking account of the efforts of the inept beekeepers he sold them to. Alas, it's scenes like this, in which Coté freely expresses his superiority to so many of the other "beeks" he encounters both in NYC and around the world, that render him a less-than-charming companion. One or two such anecdotes might be funny; 12 months' worth grow old. So, too, do the author's frequent references to his appearances in the media. The freely dropped celebrity names also grate (10 within three paragraphs in the prologue alone); irritatingly, he refers to both Martha Stewart and Yoko Ono, whom he "bump[s]" into when keeping bees at MoMA, by their given names, a familiarity he does not assume with male celebrities such as Paul Newman or Bill Clinton (Spike Lee is an exception). Coté has both a rambling, conversational style that can leave readers unmoored in his timeline and the bad habit of introducing beekeeping practices unlikely to be understood by general readers pages before he describes their purpose, often only elliptically. His obvious, oft-stated love for his father--his beekeeping mentor--and regard for those beekeepers he deems competent are warming, but it's not enough to remove the sour air of self-regard. Too much venom, not enough honey. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Prologue I bleed honey. It runs deep in my veins.  I am a fourth-generation beekeeper, intimately familiar with the world of honey bees and the aberrations of those who maintain them.  Early on, I honed my craft as a beekeeper on the array of hives that surrounded my boyhood home in Fairfield County, Connecticut. But today, aside from my apiaries in the suburbs and countryside surrounding Gotham, my turf includes skyscrapers, community gardens, ancient cemeteries, international territory, and other hidden pockets of New York City. My apiaries top, or have topped, some of New York's most iconic buildings and locales, from the Museum of Modern Art to the Waldorf Astoria. My bees buzz above the lawn of the United Nations and the cemeteries of Green-Wood in Brooklyn, Woodlawn in the Bronx, and St. Patrick's Old Cathedral down on Little Italy's Mulberry Street. They preside atop Industry City in Sunset Park and flitter over a ballet school near the Flatiron. They hover and dart above churches and synagogues, secondary schools and restaurants. The apiary I installed and tend above the seventy-second floor of a hotel near Central Park is the highest in the world, though admittedly not the most productive. While it is certainly a thrill for me to work with these industrious, extra-high-flying honey bees at such lofty altitudes, I love working with those at ground level just as much--although I do envy the spectacular views of the city dwellers. All of these bees serve restaurants, grocery stores, my own honey stand, and, of course, first and foremost, themselves. Beekeeping--and for beeks like me, urban beekeeping--is a passion for those who practice it. Worldwide, more and more people are drawn to this bewitching and satisfyingly messy work for environmental and conservation reasons, for the joy of producing something on their own, and because honey is, well, delicious. One thing I love about beekeeping is how it brings people together in combinations one could not otherwise imagine. Because of it, I've cultivated the most unexpected acquaintances and friendships both close to home and abroad. I've worked with Parisian beekeeper Marie Laure Legroux on hives that have been on the grounds of the Luxembourg Gardens since 1856 (though Marie has not been there quite so long), and others with Nicolas Geant atop the Grand Palais des Champs-Élysées and Notre-Dame (the three atop Notre-Dame, it should be noted, survived the tragic fire that gutted the building in 2019). I've harvested from log hives in rural Samburuland in Kenya, helped prepare bees for overwintering in small Moldovan villages, relocated apiaries in immediate post-earthquake Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and helped Fijian beekeepers increase their profitability through targeted marketing of honey to honeymooners. Friendships were often forged along with those endeavors, many of which continue to this day. Thoreau says that keeping bees is like directing sunbeams. Cupid supposedly dipped his arrows in honey before he set them flying. My favorite may be the words of Victor Hugo, who wrote "Life is the flower for which love is the honey." I think the Frenchman was onto something there. I adore these magical little creatures--from my rusticating hives in the countryside to their cosmopolitan cousins atop Manhattan high-rises. I love my bees and I love how I came to be a beekeeper. I learned beekeeping from my father, Norm, who is distinctly humble and soft-spoken. A wiry fellow who as of this writing is in the latter portion of his eighth decade, he was a navy man poised on a ship off the coast of Cuba during the Cuban missile crisis. After his days on the water dried up, he turned to fire, serving for more than three decades as a lieutenant in the Norwalk fire department. In the days following the attacks of 9/11, he was part of a dogged rescue and recovery team digging fruitlessly in the pile of rubble that was once the World Trade Center. But like many men of action, Norm's manner is calm, patient, and distinctive.  His mother, Aldea, grew up on a farm with honey bees in Quebec, where she, along with her siblings and father, managed colonies of the nectar-gathering empresses of the sky. When she moved to the United States, she left the bees and the farm behind, giving rise to a brief period of dormancy for beekeeping in our lineage until Norm picked up the baton--or the bee smoker and hive tool. Whatever else we are, both my brother, Mike, and I are also now beekeepers, as are my brother's children; I hope mine will be as well. Through our charity, a 501(c)(3), Bees Without Borders, my father and I have traveled the world as a team carrying on the family tradition, teaching, listening, and working with bees while navigating our own modest bee business at home. And beekeeping for the beekeeper is a lot like it is for the honey bees themselves, or at least can be. Overlapping generations working together. Cooperative brood care. Division of labor. Mutual love of honey. We all have a lot in common.  In New York City, a place where passion and competition abound, there were only a couple of dozen beehives registered when beekeeping became legal in 2010 (although many more went unregistered). About a decade later, there are hundreds of registered beehives in the city with an estimated hundreds more unregistered. While most, myself included, would say that more beehives is a good thing, the zeal for beekeeping has led to a situation that any New Yorker, bee enthusiast or not, will find unsurprising: The business of beekeeping can be cutthroat. Many would correctly describe the act of beekeeping itself as humbling, serene, instructive, and even meditative. But it can also be rife with rivalries and animosity, turf wars and hostile takeovers. Sheepishly, I confess to once--but happily no longer--being among the most guilty of those megalomaniacs; there's only so much real estate for the bees, and there's a finite supply of nectar where I practice the ancient art. At long last the bees have taught me humility. Still, from time to time there are conflicts. The honey of a crowded hive is defended by a thousand stings. Or, at least, so say the Olney Hymns. For all the competition, occasional bouts of unpleasantness, and stings--from bees and humans alike--there are many things I very much enjoy about being part of an urban beekeeping community. Living in Manhattan, I've had occasional brushes with celebrities, which are nearly always exciting and good fodder for stories--like the time I met and had a friendly chat with Denzel Washington, or when Natalie Portman walked off smiling, clutching a jar of my whipped honey. Aziz Ansari, the world-famous comedian, saw no shame in pragmatically bargaining five dollars off his purchase, and it was exciting when Uma Thurman, herself a beekeeper at the time, bought one of our honeycombs.  Setting up shop and hawking honey at the Union Square Greenmarket in lower Manhattan has introduced me to many intriguing people, including famous chefs, actors, and artists. Padma Lakshmi regularly comes by, and we talk about bees and life. Martha Stewart, whose bees my father tended for twenty years, comes by on occasion. Alec Baldwin and I have discussed the trials and tribulations of being a father later in life. David Schwimmer and I laughed about our uncanny resemblance when we were in our twenties, "which I hope was a compliment to us both," he said, certainly joking, since neither of us were pinups.  Hugh Jackman and I conversed for ten minutes without my knowing who he was (nor, to be fair, he I); he was in the company of celebrity chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten and, the market being a foodie mecca, I thought that all of the hangers-on and cameras were there for Chef Jean-Georges. Hugh and I talked about distinct Australian honey varieties, like Leatherwood from Tasmania, and how on Hog Bay, Kangaroo Island, the Ligurian Bee Sanctuary continues to breed the last remaining pure Ligurian honey bee stock in the world. As he departed, having purchased a bottle of buckwheat honey, I asked him what he did for a living. "I do some acting, singing. . . . I'm doing something on Broadway now," he replied, very matter-of-factly and without a trace of amusement at my ignorance of his identity. "Excellent! Good luck with that!" I told him sincerely. When they were able to speak again, the two women who work with me informed me that I had been speaking with a megastar best known at the time for portraying Wolverine in the X-Men series. Excerpted from Honey and Venom: Confessions of an Urban Beekeeper by Andrew Coté All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.