About
05.07
McCartney Taylor is the name and I plan to change the world. Or at least a small part of it. I’m targeting about 30 square km of North Central Tanzania. But I’m getting ahead of myself.
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I’m an engineer by training. Electrical undergrad, masters in Petroleum Engineering. However, I didn’t practice long as an engineer, I went into business for myself pretty early. I run companies of Geo-spatial databases for Oil and Gas exploration, another for GIS training, and others. Austin, Texas is my home, full of music and playful nuttiness. A place easy to forget the rest of the world.
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Every year or two I go on expeditions. My main hobby is meteorite recovery, known as meteoritics. I’ve got another website about that called outofabluesky.com.
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It was on an expedition in east Africa in 2006 that I got the bug for beekeeping. In a remote village near a meteorite fall zone, I was staying in a hut with a villager and I was asking about the sideways logs in the trees. The villager looked at me and said “You don’t know? That’s a beehive!” as if I was the dumbest SOB on the planet. I reflected on that for a while and was amused that given all my technical prowess and advantages I inherit from being an American in an upper class social tier, I hadn’t a clue what that long thing was in the tree. That was their tech on their turf, and it kept them in honey. That particular piece of tech was merely a log hive, one that must be destroyed to get to the honey.
So I thought, “Hey, if I could teach these guys better beekeeping skills, I bet I could improve the quality of life for the entire region.” And so began my downward spiral into the depths of the belly of bee-lore. From my research, I discovered that the Top Bar Hive was the hive for the poorest of the villages, and that Langs would be good for the better villages. A $80 hive has no place in a region where the average income is $220/year, where I was. But a $5 hive, hey, we got something there.
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This is end of my beekeeping beginnings. It is not the beginnings of my end. I’ll keep you posted, and I’ll get videos of the village the next time I go.
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Hi there, are you still on your quest to improve Tanzanian beekeeping? I’m interested!
get in touch!
Yes! Improving the world, 1 hive at a time.
[...] Taylor over at Learning Beekeeping has the best description of the feel-good nature of the Kiva experience. He’s a member of [...]
[...] media are a good alternative when the bees aren’t near. And there’s none better than McCartney Taylor’s website and YouTube [...]
[...] media are a good alternative when the bees aren’t near. And there’s none better than McCartney Taylor’s website and YouTube [...]
Taylor, you have an awesome website and I have thoroughly enjoyed your videos on YouTube. I am Ken Graham, Video Engineer, Coffee Roaster and budding beekeeper. I am lucky to be under the guidance of a 3′rd generation beekeeper here in the Napa Valley. I have family in Texas and my grandmother was born in Sherman. I lived in Oklahoma City for 4 years (hope you won’t hold that against me..lol) and have been around beekeeping all of my life and now am taking the plunge..at 49!
Thank you for a great and informative website and if you ever want to try my Air Roasted Coffee’s, as they say in Texas, “Give me a Hollar.” -Ken Graham