Your Honey Bees are Now Mining in Gogama, *Mon Ami*
Bonjour from the North — three cities, one corridor, and the stories that don't make it south of Barrie.
Okay, so you know how sometimes you hear something and you just gotta stop, maybe spill a little of your Timmies coffee, and ask, "Wait, *sérieusement*?" That was me this morning when I saw this piece about Laurentian University. You're not going to believe this, but a researcher up there is putting honey bees to work, not for honey, not for pollination, but to track how well they're cleaning up old mine sites near Gogama. Yes, *les abeilles*! Little winged research assistants. It's the kind of innovative, out-of-the-box thinking we need more of up here when we're dealing with the long shadow of resource extraction.
### Bees, Gold, and a Better North
The idea is brilliant, really. Bees forage for pollen and nectar, right? As they do this around the Côté Gold Mine, they pick up tiny samples of the environment. The researcher can then analyze what's in the bees' pollen loads to see what metals, what elements, are present. It gives a picture of the health of the soil, the water, and the effectiveness of the rehabilitation efforts. It’s like having thousands of tiny, flying environmental monitors working non-stop. For a region like ours, with a history tied so deeply to mining, from the gold fields of Timmins to the nickel in Sudbury, finding ways to heal the land is *super important*. We’ve seen the impact of industry, good and bad, on places like the St. Marys River, and any effort to do things better, with an eye on the environment, is a step in the right direction.
* **Environmental Monitoring:** Bees act as natural, widespread samplers of the local ecosystem.
* **Cost-Effective:** Potentially a less invasive and more efficient way to gather data compared to traditional methods.
* **Long-Term Impact:** Helps ensure that mine sites are properly rehabilitated for future generations.
This isn't just some science experiment for a lab in Southern Ontario. This has real implications for our communities. Think about the legacy of places like Algoma Steel here in the Sault – we know the impact industry has on the land and the air. If we can use natural systems to help us monitor and improve environmental health around active and decommissioned sites, that's a win for everyone who lives along this corridor, from Sudbury all the way to our waterfront here in Sault Ste. Marie. It means a healthier future for our kids, a better environment for our fishing on Lake Superior, and stronger, more sustainable resource development. And that, *mes amis*, is something worth buzzing about.
Marc-André Desjardins, MiTL Sports Desk, Sault Ste. Marie.
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