Text and photos by Bethany Shepler, SPP Green Track Coordinator
Class photo of beekeeping apprenticeship students with Ed Baldwin (far left) and Duane McBride (second from the left).
The bees may have turned in for winter, but beekeeping students at Stafford Creek Correction Center (SCCC) are still hard at work. Their first beekeeping apprenticeship course is almost done and we are impressed and thankful.
I had the pleasure of sitting in on the last class in the series at SCCC, taught by Duane McBride from the Olympia Beekeepers Association. The students came well prepped for class and full of thoughtful questions. Ed Baldwin, a Grounds Specialist at Stafford Creek, is taking the class as well. Ed hopes to continue to expand the beekeeping program—it has been in place since 2009, but is doing better than ever with the renewed attention and education.
Duane McBride answering questions about a test the students took in an earlier class.
Students that go through the beekeeping apprenticeship course graduate as certified beekeeping apprentices and can put those skills to further use upon release.
Since last spring’s Beekeeping Summit, we have seen beekeeping programs booming statewide – adding nine programs in only six months! We are thrilled by all of the support and enthusiasm surrounding the beekeeping programs. Beekeeping is really taking flight within Washington State prisons and we can’t bee-lieve how fast the program is growing. Keep up the hard work, Stafford Creek!
Students chuckle at a beekeeping pun during the class…we were buzzing with bee puns.
A student looks up something for reference as Duane McBride talks about hive care.
Students listen as Duane explains hive care techniques.
As class wraps up, students talk and laugh a little before returning back to their normal activities.
This is where the bees are housed at Stafford Creek. The inmates constructed the shelter, painted it, and made the beehives that now homes for two healthy hives.