retiredbeekeepers
retiredbeekeepers
The Retired Beekeepers
139 posts
The Retired Beekeepers were a Brighton-based all-inclusive LGBT+ Sherlock Holmes group running from 2015 to 2019. The group's publication, The Practical Handbook, has all six issues archived for all to browse, share, and enjoy
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
retiredbeekeepers · 2 years ago
Text
AO3 collection
Hi all,
We've created a collection for anyone who might have previously uploaded their work for The Practical Handbook on AO3. Or maybe you haven't shared your piece after publication but would consider doing it now?
The Practical Handbook @ AO3
It would be lovely to be able to compile a couple of articles, poems, art, etc, for easier viewing. Or even just gather a few participants together.
Thanks x
40 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 5 years ago
Text
Update of sorts - retiring
Beside our annual field trip, we have been very silent and for this we apologise. This is due to our lead members’ other commitments and personal wanderings. We feel like it is time to officially dissolve the society as we have not been able to find the time to organize any new events or publications, nor are we based in Brighton anymore.
We thank everyone for having taken part in our meetings and issues over the years, as well as for the tremendous support we have received online.
Issues will be archived and accessible as pdf for anyone to view on Tumblr or at Elinor’s site, www.mistyzeo.net. If you want to own one of our remaining print issues, do email over at retiredbeekeepers @ gmail . com for details. Social media and so on will be deactivated over the following weeks with the exception of this account for archival purposes.
Please keep in touch with Elinor, who organizes The Left Coast Sherlockian Symposium and is an Associate Editor for The Watsonian, off Tumblr at [email protected].
Thank you again for supporting the society,
The Beekeepers
70 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 7 years ago
Note
Have you published the theme of the summer issue? If not, are you planning to do so?
Hi, sorry we’ve been pretty quiet this year! The call for the next issue hasn’t gone out yet as life’s been quite busy but hopefully we’ll be back on track soon.
12 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 7 years ago
Note
Hi! I was wondering if all the handbooks so far are still available in prints. I’m super excited to read them. I wish I could submit stuff for them but my poems aren’t all that great. I hope you have a lovely day! :)
All handbooks should be available through blurb, you can either browse through our profile or the handbook page which lists all issues with links to their individual pages.
When a submission window opens, please do submit! We’d love to have you in x
13 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Happy new year! Issue 6 of the Practical Handbook of Bee Culture is now available for download (PDF).
The theme of this issue is “Domesticity”.
The digital version is set up as pay-what-you-want, so you can get it for free, but if you want to chuck us a few pence for operating costs you can do that easily. A hard copy is available through our on-demand printer.
Download the digital version
Contributors
Angela Lusk @ajanuarylark
Airy Maher
Brewster North
Dee Storrow
Ernest @6utton
Holly @iliadtea
Ili @slowbees
Katinka Rohard Hansen @fire-and-fog
Marleen Donovan @a-different-equation
Downloads of the Handbook are free for you to read and share as you see fit. Pass a copy along to a friend! The print version is also set at the lowest price possible to be as affordable as possible. However, if you have enjoyed your reading experience, please consider donating a few pennies to the Beekeepers. All of us put a lot of love and energy into running the group, feeding everyone, editing and producing the Handbook, and keeping our members up to date with every newsletter, and we do it all in our free time. We appreciate your support, in whatever form it comes!
230 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Call for Submissions: The Practical Handbook of Bee Culture (Winter 2018)
The theme of the Winter 2018 issue is “Domesticity.” What do Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson do at home when no one is watching? What would home life look like for our secondary and tertiary characters? Think outside the box and start peeking in some of those ground-floor windows. 
Submissions are due November 15th, 2017 to [email protected]. Publication is slated for January 2018.
We welcome fiction, non-fiction, poetry, meta, illustrations, comics, collages, word games, etc. Anything you could print on a piece of paper and hand to a fellow Sherlock Holmes aficionado! The Handbook is in black and white and while we accept colour submissions, please bear in mind that they will have to be edited to fit the rest of the content.
The word limit for written work is 3,000 words. Please get in touch if you have an article/work that exceeds this but would potentially still fit the theme of the issue.
The page limit for visual art is 5 sequential pages of comic or linked illustrations, or 2 individual pieces.
It is OK to submit work that has already been published elsewhere! We offer no compensation (unfortunately) as the handbook is a non-profit publication, and so we are not exclusive in that way. If you’ve written a great essay or piece of meta, or shared your artwork, or posted that fic, we are happy to give it another home and a new audience.
We would like to especially encourage anyone identifying as LGBTQ+ to submit pieces, as we feel that our voices rarely have the opportunity to be heard when it comes to Holmesian scholarship. Submissions are not limited to members of the Beekeepers.
We ask that you keep all submissions at or under a Teen/PG-13 rating. Exploration of gender and sexuality is encouraged but we do not publish explicit sex or graphic violence.
Questions and submissions can be directed to [email protected].
123 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Link
2 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Note
Granada Holmes and bees. I love you!
We love all of the above!
8 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Note
Hi! Your website says that the new edition is not available, will it be up soon?
Hi, was this the PDF on Gumroad or the book edition on Blurb? Gumroad was set as a pre-order while we were setting it up last week, but both should be available:
Print: http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/invited/7041890/1ec85776bed9da36b277d2f12ca71f2765b650ad
PDF: https://gumroad.com/l/bBrC
1 note · View note
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Happy solstice! Issue 5 of the Practical Handbook of Bee Culture is now available for download (PDF).
The theme of this issue is “the course prescribed for surgeons in the army,” or "doctors & soldiers”. How did Watson get home from Afghanistan? What did he dream of, back in England? How does a man with a medical degree reconcile his experience as a soldier? And what does Conan Doyle’s fiction draw from his life as a physician? These questions and more are explored among these pages, in fic, essays, poetry, and illustration. You’ll see a few familiar names as well as some new ones, for both of which we are very grateful. See the Afterword for info on submitting your work to future issues.
The digital version is set up as pay-what-you-want, so you can get it for free, but if you want to chuck us a few pence for operating costs you can do that easily. A hard copy is available through our on-demand printer.
Download the digital version
Contents and Contributors
Peshawar by Dora Brown @dora-altamont
Art by Ili @slowbees
Mentor by Jane Mailander
Confessions of an Army Doctor series by Katinka @fire-and-fog
Arthur Conan Doyle and ‘Round the Red Lamp’ by @tweedisgood
In Good Hands by Susanne Wagner
Unsheathed by Rose Jordan
“You Have Been in Afghanistan, I Perceive” by ColebaltBlue
The Choice by Jenna Burns @jenna221b
Art by Helena Pinto @bracari-iris
Kindly Stopped For Me by @mistyzeo
Downloads of the Handbook are free for you to read and share as you see fit. Pass a copy along to a friend! The print version is also set at the lowest price possible to be as affordable as possible. However, if you have enjoyed your reading experience, please consider donating a few pennies to the Beekeepers. All of us put a lot of love and energy into running the group, feeding everyone, editing and producing the Handbook, and keeping our members up to date with every newsletter, and we do it all in our free time. We appreciate your support, in whatever form it comes!
245 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
A Walk on the South Downs Beachy Head to East Dean Sunday, 23rd July @ 10:15am
RSVP for this trip is essential as space is limited, so please email [email protected] to get on the list. Details of the itinerary and meeting points will only be sent to registered attendees.
Our annual field trip to the so-called retirement cottage and its surroundings! We will spend the day stomping around the Sussex Downs and admiring the sea. The journey requires some moderate physical activity, so if you would like to join us but don’t feel up to a long, hilly walk, we will have several points along the trip where you can join or depart, according to your whims. For instance, there will be a picnic opportunity around noon and a stop for drinks in the afternoon. If you have any questions, please get in touch and we’ll be able to give you more specifics! Like every year, we are hoping for good weather but can’t promise the sky will cooperate, so we recommend sturdy shoes, a rain jacket or umbrella, and a sense of adventure. In case of bad weather, we will shelter at the National Trust café in Birling Gap or the Tiger Inn in East Dean.
We are more than happy to try and accommodate everyone. Please don’t hesitate to contact us with any special needs or requests so that we can arrange something in advance.
To RSVP, or if you have any other questions, please email us at [email protected]!
25 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Note
When will the Summer Handbook be available? (:
If all goes according to plan, the summer Handbook will be available by the end of June!
8 notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Well done, Earth | Beachy Head, Eastbourne, England | July, 2015
9K notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
a commission for @granada-brett-crumbs 🍂
1K notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
More bees!  Installed in front door, and in progress on the bench.
19K notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Books about Bees and Bee Keeping:
The bee-keeper’s manual  1860
Bee Keeping by “The Times” Bee-Master  1864
Who was the first architect  1874
The handy book of bees 1875
The Apiary 1878
The Honey-bee  1884
A book about bees  1886
Bees & bee-keeping 1886
ABC of bee culture 1888
British Bee-Keeper’s guide book  1911
9K notes · View notes
retiredbeekeepers · 8 years ago
Text
Masterpost -- Strangers: Homosexual Love in the Nineteenth Century
The series is now complete!
Here’s what we learned from Graham Robb and his brilliant book:
1) What ACD said about Oscar Wilde, how do you know if you have homosexual “characteristics”, and why the colour green is gay
2) Turkish bathhouses, the Achilles statue, and my dear boy
3) Lifting the veil, coded meanings, and red neckties/handkerchiefs
4) Gay marriages took place in secret in the 19th century
5) Knee gropes and “crude symptoms of physical sexual sympathy”
6) Homosexuality in Victorian literature, Part 1
7) Homosexuality in Victorian literature, Part 2
8) Sherlock Holmes and Victorian Homosexuality – original post
9) Sherlock Holmes and Victorian Homosexuality – with extended material on ACD, authorial intent, and Hellenic influences on 19th century gay culture
10) Link to purchase the book from amazon.co.uk
3K notes · View notes