Not for Profit

Un-bee-lievable! Chris is on a mission to install 500 beehives & offer support to the homeless

The queen, marked with a dot, and bee workers around her.

By Staff Reporter [email protected]

Published: March 17, 2022 | Updated: 18th March 2022

Chris Bialan is a busy bee.

He’s the Founder of a Community Interest Company (CIC) which is on a mission to save the bees in Dorset – and Hampshire – by building and installing 500 new beehives.

They’re now looking for foster homes for the hives.

All costs are covered by Bee Mission and the beehives will be fully maintained by one of their beekeepers

And it doesn’t stop there.

Poole-based Bee Mission 500 CIC also plans to offer support for homeless people to upskill and retrain in a variety of roles within the project, including becoming beekeepers. 

Chris, 64, first came up with the concept a few years ago.

He said: “I was moving my daughter, Jess, with the help of a guy called Serge.

“We were in the van together for four hours on the way to Stoke from Bournemouth and somehow we got round to talking about bees.

“I’ve always loved bees and, on that trip, I found out that Serge was a beekeeper and had been for the last nine years.

“At the time, he was running four hives on an estate which got me thinking.”

Chris, pictured, is also Chairman of Affinity Care Group Limited, the Royal Buckinghamshire Hospital, Kings Lodge Centre for Complex Needs and Joint Owner of five care homes across the country.

He said: “On that journey, I got thinking about all the gardens and available space out there that could be used for hives.

“I then realised that the grounds at my care home sites were a great place to start.” 

Bee Mission’s pilot scheme in 2020 was not a success.

It saw the installation of four beehives at Kings Lodge Nursing Home in Reigate, one of Chris’ care homes where Serge was working at the time.

Chris said: “The hives at Kings Lodge didn’t actually work.

“The bees didn’t take well or produce much honey.

“So we decided to try another site.

“We put some hives in at the Allenbrook Nursing home in Fordingbridge.

“Thankfully this site was much more successful.  

We quickly got up to five hives, all with abundant harvests.

“Each hive can contain up to 50,000 bees and can produce 40 to 50kg of honey which is amazing.

“I have the greatest love and respect for bees and Serge [pictured] is an amazing bee keeper.

“If there was a world without bees then the world would stop growing things.

“They are the most amazing creatures.” 

 After the success in Fordingbridge, Chris was inspired.

He said: “I began to think about where else we could put hives and this is where the idea of fostering hives came about.

“I think that there are lots of people out there that care just as much as I do about the plight of the bees but wouldn’t have even thought about installing a hive as they don’t know anything about hives or bees and don’t know how to look after them.  

“So, what if we could solve that problem?

“What if we could supply the hives, and either train people up to look after their own hives or send our beekeepers round to manage them?

“This is when Bee Mission was truly born.

“Imagine if even a small percentage of people had a hive installed and how much difference that could make to our bee population.

“Our mission now is to get 500 beehives installed in Dorset and Hampshire’s gardens, balconies, on roof tops and in local areas.

“I think we can do it.” 

But Bee Mission isn’t just about getting as many bees and beehives installed as possible as this can have a disastrous effect on natural pollinators if there isn’t enough pollen to go around.

Chris said: “We’re working with bee conservationists to ensure that we also help the wild pollinators.

“We’re also planning on planting lots of wild meadows and gardens on our own land.

“We’ll also encourage the communities in Dorset and Hampshire around our hives to plant as many wildflowers as possible.”  

Bee Mission is on the lookout for land to rent, so it can expand.

The team is hoping for a fairly small plot with space for an outbuilding.

The aim is to use the space as a community training and display centre, workshop and home for their own hives and bee-friendly flowers. 

Bee Mission also plans to help people, too.

Chris, and fellow Bee Mission Director Amy Foster, pictured, have helped rough sleepers by cooking and distributing food up to three times a week.

Now they’re working on ideas to provide assistance through the CIC.

Chris said: “We’ve been working with the homeless in Bournemouth for two and half years now and really wanted to provide a way they can get involved, to help them by upskilling and giving them some focus.

“Whether it’s training to become a beekeeper, packing and selling the honey, or becoming part of the day to day running of the project, we want to offer them new skills and a way to move forward, as well as routine and the knowledge they are making a difference. 

“We’ve set out with some big ideas, big targets, and a big mission for Dorset and Hampshire.

“But we are confident in the power of the community to help and support each other, and the bees.

“Next stop, Bee Mission 50,000 across the whole of the country!” 

  • To find out more about the work that Bee Mission do, and how to foster a hive, head to beemission.co.uk. 

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