Jana Kinsman’s startup Bike-a-Bee will be a distributed network of beehives in the Chicago area — Kinsman will hook up local urban farms and gardens with bees, which will help pollinate the plants while also producing honey. (Greenspaces that host a beehive get a share of the honey profits.) Meanwhile, Kinsman will care for the bees by riding from hive to hive on her bike. Urban gardens, beekeeping, biking … who says Chicago isn’t basically Portland?

Kinsman got the idea for distributed beekeeping while apprenticing at an Oregon apiary.

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Philip the beekeeper had not just one bee yard (in his back yard), but over 13 throughout the city. One at an elementary school, one in a family’s back yard, one at a blueberrry patch, one at a woman’s permaculture farm… The list goes on. So although we spent the day checking on the hives and collecting honey frames, we did a lot of speaking with community members who loved having the hives and believed in being a part of urban agriculture and the world’s health.

I told Philip that when I got back to Chicago I would do something similar to what he does with his truck, except I’d do it on my bike with a trailer. I’m an avid year-round cyclist, and the prospect of owning a car isn’t appealing or fiscally possible. Thus the Bike-a-Bee project was born!

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Being a small operation with no transportation overhead (besides a bike trailer) means that Bike-a-Bee has low startup costs. Kinsman just raised $7,000 through a Kickstarter campaign, enough to get Bike-a-Bee running, and announced meeting her goal with this gif which made me laugh nonstop for a million years.