QUESTIONABLE FEW THAT SURVIVED THE FRENCH CATHEDRAL FIRE
Three hives containing more than 180,000 bees
in total were found intact on the cathedral’s roof despite the devastating blaz
Following the tragedy of Monday’s fire at the
Notre Dame in Paris, news came on Friday of a miracle as sweet as honey.
Notre Dame fire cause may have been
electrical – official
The hundreds of thousands of bees that lived in hives inside Notre
Dame’s roof are alive and well, according to the beekeeper, or apiculteur, that
oversees them.
“Thank goodness the flames didn’t touch
them,” Nicolas Géant, the hives’ 51-year-old beekeeper, told CNN “It’s a miracle.”
Three hives that are home to an estimated
60,000 bees each – 180,000 bees in total – are located on a lower roof atop the
cathedral’s first floor.
The flames of Monday’s fire – which
investigators say was probably caused by
an electrical short circuit took down the cathedral’s spire and a large portion
of its roof.
For a few days after the fire, Géant was
worried about his beloved bees, and the French police and firefighters wouldn’t
let him go up on the roof to check on them. Hopes that the bees survived rested
on aerial photos of the cathedral’s roof, which showed the hives still intact.
“You see that everything is burnt, there are
holes in the roof, but you can still see the three beehives,” Géant told NBC
News on Wednesday.
On Thursday, the French urban beekeeping
company Beeopic Apiculture posted a picture on Instagram that confirmed the Notre
Dame bees were OK.
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