Traffic on a Chinese motorway
was brought to a standstill last week after two million bees escaped from an
overturned truck. MailOnline reported that the swarm of insects trapped a
beekeeper along with the truck's driver in south-west China's Yunnan Province;
while three dogs of the driver were killed by bee stings. The report added that firefighters spent 40
minutes closing off the area and freeing the truck driver and beekeeper.
Two million bees brought
traffic to a standstill as their carrier
overturned after the driver made a sudden turn. Firefighters attended the scene
and helped clear the bees by spraying water on the insects to calm them down. The boxes inside the truck carried over 200
beehives. The bees came free from their boxes after the truck carrying them
overturned. Authorities recruited six beekeepers from the local area to
recapture the insects in a task that took around 20 hours to complete. The report
adds that with a total valuation of
£43,542 or around 420,000 Yuan, the owner would have been at a serious
financial loss had the bees not been recaptured.
The road was reopened after the
clean-up – the beekeeper and the driver were reported to be stable condition after undergoing treatment
for multiple bee stings and other injuries.
Downunder in Australia, for billionaire Kerry Stokes, honey is proving to a whole lot
tastier than iron ore and television. Billionaire Stokes has most of his
fortune tied up in mining and media via his listed Seven Group Holdings, two
industries that are suffering plenty of pain. SGH holds a big stake in the
company that holds dealership rights for
the Caterpillar mining equipment and services business in Western Australia.
Not surprisingly, SGH is not exactly a market
darling at the moment as both of its main industries go through a sticky patch.
Its shares have fallen about 30 per cent in the past 12 months, which has wiped
a cool $500 million from the value of Stokes' shares.
Capilano Honey has pursued its task of taking honey from hive
to home, for more than 60 years. And in co-operation with its highly skilled
beekeepers – many of whom are themselves shareholders – the company's brand
signifies quality (every batch is tested.
Capilano shares have kept climbing in the past 12 months. The honey maker's shares closed at $18.59 on
Tuesday, compared with the $5.25 Stokes paid per share when he first emerged as
a substantial shareholder a little more than 18 months ago.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
17th Feb 2016.
