How a glut of California almonds could mean fewer Northwest honeybees

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Most of us are familiar with how our food grows. Fruit trees, crop plants -- they all put out blossoms. From there, honeybees spread pollen and collect nectar to grow their local hives. That buzzy work is a critical piece of agriculture, because without bees, the food we'd like to grow... won't grow.
But a recent glut of almonds in California is disrupting a bee renting ecosystem -- a "bee-cosystem," if you will -- that Northwest farmers depend on. 
Soundside caught up with Anna King about her recent story on local beekeeping and its relationship with California almonds. King covers Washington and Oregon mainly east of the Cascades for the Northwest News Network. 

Read Anna King's full reporting on the Washington beekeeping industry here.
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How a glut of California almonds could mean fewer Northwest honeybees

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How do people escape the 'churn' and enter recovery?
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