In a critical race against time, the dedicated staff and volunteers of ‘s Apiary Project are working tirelessly to combat the alarming decline of honeybee populations in the United States.
In June, an showed that beekeepers lost nearly half (48%) of their managed colonies, the second-highest death rate on record. The biggest culprit was the Varroa mite, a parasite that feeds on bee larvae and transmits viruses.
Kaua?i CC¡¯s hives are one of the few disease-free honeybee sites left in the state. According to the , Hawai?i was free of the varroa mite, until it was detected on O?ahu in 2007. Since then, the varroa mite has also been found on Hawai?i Island. Only Kaua?i, Maui and Moloka?i have so far remained free of the pest.
One of the most important things Kaua?i CC Apiary Project volunteers do is breed queen bees in order to continue to protect the island from the varroa mites.
¡°One of our main reasons for being is to be able to raise queens here right on the island, to make them available to other Kaua?i beekeepers to lessen the chance that someone will import a queen bee,¡± said Alan Spencer, a volunteer and instructor.
Spencer¡¯s years of experience were on display as he collected a ripe queen from a busy buzzing hive with his bare hands and placed her into a vial-like container for transport.
In the bee-ginning

Kaua?i CC¡¯s Apiary Project started in 2010 with some funding from the Kaua?i Rural Development Project. Additional funding in later years came from the Hawai?i Department of Agriculture, a Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education grant and local donors. The college started offering continuing education classes in beekeeping and garnered first place awards in the Hawaiian Honey Challenge in 2018 and 2019. Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit.
Spencer and a cadre of volunteers kept the apiary alive. The lifesavers included retired electronics instructor Francis Takahashi Jr. and, more recently, Academic Advisor Valerie Melle.
¡°The long-term goal is to support beekeepers on Kaua?i, offer technical support and really educate the public,¡± said Takahashi Jr. ¡°Agriculture is really important on this island.¡±

Agriculture is also important far beyond Kaua?i, as the Apiary Project estimates that one-third of Americans¡¯ diet is directly or indirectly derived from honeybee pollination.
Melle got involved when she was looking for something different to do during the COVID-19 pandemic.
¡°This was the wildest thing that I saw happening on campus,¡± she said. ¡°So I just jumped in and I was so inspired by their class that I¡¯m still here.¡±
Bee-utiful future
Melle has since taken on the role of volunteer marketer for the Apiary Project and has big ideas for the future, such as restarting the college¡¯s application to the Department of Agriculture to export their bees. She recently got a query from a hotel that is interested in collaborating with Kaua?i CC to start an onsite apiary as part of its hospitality and culinary offerings. There was also mention of someday being able to export to clientele in Japan.
The more immediate future may hold launching an adopt-a-beehive program to generate more education and support.
Interim Chancellor Margaret Sanchez said her long-term hope is to eventually have a for-credit program so that students may earn college credits along with a certificate in beekeeping.
Sanchez said, ¡°The overall hope is to expand our program and offer it to more people on Kaua?i, so that we can increase the health of the bees, the health of our farms and the health of our crops.¡±
¡ªby Kelli Abe Trifonovitch
