Beyond honey -- Türkiye's beekeepers turn to tourism as climate bites
NKARA, July 31 (Xinhua) -- Amid lavender fields in Lalapasa, a town in Türkiye's northwestern Edirne province, Nuri Danisman guides visitors past humming hives, offering golden spoons of honey. "We produce high-quality lavender honey and share our unique experience with guests in an eco-friendly way through apitourism," the beekeeper told Xinhua. "Tourists really enjoy our tours through the lavender fields and around our honey production sites," he said. His tours represent a growing lifeline for Türkiye's apiculture sector -- a pillar of the country's economy with nearly 9 million hives, almost 98,000 registered enterprises and some 100,000 tons of honey produced yearly -- now battling to survive climate chaos. Drought, erratic blooms, and scorching temperatures are disrupting nectar flows. "Each year the flowers bloom earlier or later, and the rains come at the wrong times. Our bees cannot keep up," said Burak Yalcin, a second-generation beekeeper from eastern Sivas province. "We've been losing colonies every season now," he said.
