An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | March 29, 2011

Zabul farmers harvest livelihood from National Guard ADT

By Air Force Senior Airman Jessica Lockoski Air National Guard

FORWARD OPERATING BASE APACHE, Afghanistan - National Guard Soldiers from the Arkansas Agricultural Development Team 2, Forward Operating Base Apache are using their expertise to help boost the productivity and quality of Afghan farming industries.

A bee sting can hurt, but farmers in Zabul province, Afghanistan, where there are far more dangerous threats, are embracing the new livelihood of beekeeping.

“There are places in Afghanistan where there has been beekeeping for some time, but in Zabul, it is a new concept,” said Army Maj. Marden Hueter, operations officer for Arkansas ADT.

“We selected three farmers in the primary key districts: Shajoy, Qalat and Tarnak Wa Jaldak, with hopes they will be our beekeeping ambassadors, and their farms will act as demonstration orchards,” he said.

The ADT provided farmers with starter kits including eight hives each, additional empty hives for repopulation and beekeeping tools.

Hueter and fellow ADT member, Army Sgt. Savana Smith, helped the famers learn beekeeping at FOB Smart, Qalat City, Afghanistan.

Following the training, ADT members met with two newly trained farmers, March 24, to help present the beehives at a local nursery on behalf of the Qalat Directorate of Agriculture Irrigation and Livestock office and contracting beekeeper.

At 16-years-old and the youngest of the three farmers trained by ADT, Ahmed Mohammad graciously accepted his new honeybees with a smile on his face.

“We are very happy,” Mohammad said. “It’s the first time we will have received bees. Before we went to the training, we were afraid of the honey bees, but now, I’m not afraid of getting stung.”

As a new beekeeper, Mohammad will be tending to his hives by himself. He said he has been stung before, but with his newfound skills, the price of a bee sting offers much more than a brief period of inconvenience, it offers a new opportunity of living.

Hueter used his experience as an independent beekeeper to help teach the farmers about the benefits of apiary and bee maintenance.

While most people may think bees are primarily used for honey production, Hueter explained these famers learned a more valuable benefit.

“Here, beekeeping will be done for the cross pollination of orchards,” he said. “Pre-Soviet invasion, Afghanistan was considered the ‘Orchard of Central Asia.’ Cross pollination can maximize orchard production which will increase profits for the farmer.”

Cash crops in the Zabul region include almonds groves, pomegranates, figs, apricots and apple trees.

With the benefits of bee pollination, Hueter said there may be a 40 percent increase in fruit production.

As in the beginning of any agricultural project, seeing results will take time. The process of development will require the new farmers to demonstrate patience as their hives begin to grow.

“With a new hive, it usually takes a year to become fully established,” Heuter said. “It is the bees’ natural tendency to split the hive in half when they become crowded in their space. They will grow a new queen, find a new home, and that is one of the ways bees repopulate and reproduce.”

By this time next year, the farmers should see the development of swarming behavior. The bees will make new beehives and the keepers can sell them. The profit will not only give the farmer more motivation to see value in his bees, but the money-making proposition will spread bees to other potential beekeepers or other orchards he may own.

“I think this will be a successful project,” said Army Sgt. Savana Smith.

“They took in all the training, asked a lot of questions and are excited to get their honey bees,” she said. “We get to see how they interact with the bees, use the new tools and see how their confidence level has been built up from the training.”

ADT will soon offer training to members of the Qalat DAIL to ensure continuous observation of the hives and make sure the beekeeping project is a success.

“The hands-on demonstrations give us a chance to assess the overall effectiveness,” Heuter said. “As long as these farmers are working with their bees and there are positive results, it will be a project to continue in the future.”

 

 

Related Articles
Maryland Army National Guard Soldiers from 1st Battalion, 175th Infantry Battalion and paramedics from Old Town Fire Station push an ambulance out of the snow in Baltimore, Jan. 25, 2026. At the direction of Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, about 160 personnel of the Maryland National Guard activated to support civil authorities with specialized vehicles across the state to ensure rapid response capabilities for communities that may require assistance during inclement weather conditions. Photo by Staff Sgt. Lindiwe Henry.
National Guard Members Respond to Winter Weather in 15 States
By Sgt. 1st Class Christy Sherman, | Jan. 26, 2026
ARLINGTON, Va. – More than 5,400 National Guard members are on duty in 15 states in the aftermath of winter storms that dropped snow and ice from the Midwest to the Mid-Atlantic and the South over the weekend.“[I’m] proud of...

U.S. Army Command Sgt. Maj. Tim Englund, a master spur holder assigned to the 303rd Cavalry Regiment, Washington National Guard, inspects a gold spur during a ceremony at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, Jan. 9, 2026. Englund has earned both silver and gold spurs and has helped facilitate multiple Spur Rides throughout his career. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Kenneth Tucceri.
Washington, Oregon Guard Soldiers Inducted Into the Order of the Spur
By Sgt. Vivian Ainomugisha, | Jan. 26, 2026
CAMP LEMMONIER, Djibouti – Soldiers from the Washington Army National Guard, including those assigned to the 303rd Cavalry Regiment and the 81st Brigade, along with attached Soldiers from the Oregon National Guard, were...

Florida Army National Guard Soldiers assigned to Troop A and C Troop, 1st Squadron, 153rd Cavalry Regiment, including liaison monitoring teams and Religious Support Team chaplains, train alongside Tennessee Army National Guard Forward Support Medical Platoon (MEDEVAC), General Support Aviation Battalion aircrews and Florida Army National Guard 715th Military Police Company during civil disturbance response, leader engagements and joint air-ground operations Jan. 16, 2026, during a culminating training exercise at Fort Hood, Texas. The exercise highlighted total force integration as cavalry, medical, military police and religious support elements synchronized mobility, crowd management, escalation control and partner engagement to provide real-time situational awareness and achieve mission success in complex environments. Photo by Staff Sgt. Seth LaCount)
National Guard Multi-State Task Force Completes Training Exercise
By Capt. Balinda ONeal, | Jan. 26, 2026
FORT HOOD, Texas – Soldiers assigned to Task Force Gator, a multi-state National Guard formation, completed a Culminating Training Event from Jan. 12–17, marking a key milestone in the task force’s preparation for an upcoming...