Photo via Beeopic’s Instagram |
In the spring of 2013, the rooftops of Notre Dame became host to a modest colony of good-tempered urban honeybees known Buckfast bees, developed in the 1920s by a Benedictine monk. The three hives on top of the Notre Dame were installed at the behest of the cathedral’s general manager as a gesture to help promote the protection and awareness of our bees, but of course on that fateful evening in Paris, Notre Dame’s hives were quite literally in the line of fire. As firefighters battled through the night to save the 850+ year-old cathedral from total collapse, understandably, priorities lay elsewhere.
Spotted clinging to a blackened gargoyle, Nicolas Géant, the apiculturist, joyously shared the news that the bees of Notre Dame are alive and well, thanks to photo confirmation from officials onsite.
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