By SHARON LEE TEGLER, For The Capital
By SHARON LEE TEGLER, For The Capital
Capital Gazette Communications
Published
09/02/10
A walk through the garden of Dwight and Joan Fielder in late summer reveals rows of multi-colored peppers, tomatoes, squash, mustard greens, runner beans, rhubarb and a grove of raspberry vines - crops specifically chosen to attract honeybees. When not buzzing around beehives beyond the beds, the yellow and black insects can be seen flitting from blossom to blossom in this lively but serene oasis in the midst of Severna Park.
Urban beekeeping is now all the rage according to United Airlines' Hemispheres magazine. But Dwight Fielder has practiced the art for more than a decade. Inspired by childhood memories of his...
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