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NEWS | June 3, 2010

Mississippi beekeeper uses hobby at Gitmo

By Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Joshua Nistas Joint Task Force Guantanamo Public Affairs

GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba - Air Force Tech Sgt. Rodney Buntyn brings more to Joint Task Force Guantanamo Bay than just his knowledge of power production. He also brings 30 years of beekeeping experience.

Buntyn, who has been in the Air National Guard for 25 years this month, deployed to JTF Guantanamo with the 474th Expeditionary Civil Engineer Squadron. When he's not serving the Air National Guard, Buntyn is a student service specialist with the Regional Counterdrug Training Academy at Naval Air Station Meridian, Miss.

"We knew the other team before us handled bees," said Lt. Col. David Kennard, commander of the 474th ECES and the 186th Civil Engineering Squadron of the Mississippi Air National Guard. "We asked the question of who would like to work with the bees, and Buntyn said he does it as a hobby."

Buntyn said he started working with bees in 1979 when he helped a cousin who kept beehives. He brought a protective suit, a smoker and some hive tools in anticipation of working with bees in Guantanamo Bay.

"The unit here before us had caught a hive," he said. "By the time we got here the hive had died out, but we found some bees in the scrapyard, and we decided to move the bees instead of eradicating them."

Buntyn said the bees are a part of the local ecosystem and help the plant life.

Without bees, he said, that people wouldn't have food crops, because the bees pollinate them.

"I hate to see people go in and destroy a population of bees," said Kennard. "Buntyn was very methodical when taking this hive, and went through the whole hive until he found the queen."

"The bees have a structured society that's like the military," Buntyn said. "The worker bees start out at the bottom and work their way up. As they get older, their duties change. Their main mission in life is to support their hive and their queen, just like we support our country and the president."

Buntyn said he has four hives back home, and sells the honey they produce. He said one hive can make 10 to 30 gallons of honey in three to four months.

"It's got to be something you like to do," he said. "It's not an easy job dealing with bees. You have to maintain the hives regularly, and you will get stung."

Buntyn said that even though he wears a protective suit, he still got stung four times while moving a hive.

 

 

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