On a recent May morning, the couple dress in their beekeeping outfits, and fire up a smoker, a device designed to overpower the alarm pheromones of the bees. The smoker makes hive maintenance easier and safer with minimal risk of stings, although LaForest notes: “I’ve probably been stung about 25 times. But I still love my bees.”
Tending bees has had a positive effect on LaForest that goes beyond her backyard. A growing awareness of environmental concerns has flourished along with Magna’s efforts to safeguard the planet, including a corporate commitment to achieve net-zero emissions, an important step in fighting climate change. Most importantly, she credits the bees with teaching her valuable life lessons, especially about working together to achieve common goals.
One insight: Like Magna employees, bees are committed to the communities in which they live and work.
“The bees are actually the only organisms outside of human beings that live and work in a community,” she said. “Everybody in the bee community has a job, just like in Magna. But one of the most important things I’ve learned from beekeeping is staying calm under stress. When you open the hives, you are entering into their home. The best thing you can do is stay calm, no matter how many thousands of bees are buzzing around your head. The bees have taught me that this works in the office too.”