|
Charles
Martin Simon was born on July 8, 1941, at 6 A.M., in Newark,
N.J., the first major U.S. city to go bankrupt due to racial
strife. He graduated from Montclair Academy, a private, pseudo-military
high school famous for it's state-of-the-art dress code and discipline,
in 1959, and went on to Rutgers, the State University of New
Jersey, where he majored in Agriculture and English Literature.
He was always a writer, having
started his first novel in 1948, at the age of seven, and always
a nature boy, therefore the split major. But after two years
at Rutgers, he realized the agriculture he was being taught was
not the agriculture he wanted to learn, and it was only going
to get worse. He'd had enough of castrating sheep, calculating
chemical fertilizer specifications, and murdering chickens. His
English lit studies weren't much more promising. The high point
came when the editor-in-chief of the College Literary Magazine,
who, although never having learned to write himself, went on
to become the has-been of an illustrious career as the Clinton
Administration's Poet Laureate, recognized Simon's writing and
asked him to take over the magazine, which offer Simon graciously
declined.
Simon dropped out and drifted
for a few years and then went to California and became part of
the organic farming movement, as a partner in a 21-acre piece.
Believing strongly in non-mechanized farming, he worked the farm
completely by hand from 1967 until 1977. And that was where his
involvement with bees began in earnest in 1967.
The 21 acres cost $5,000 originally,
but when the partners were offered $350,000.00, they just couldn't
resist. Simon voted against the sale, arguing that the ten years
put into the land was worth more than any amount of money. He
was outvoted, the land was not divisible, and he lost the farm.
But he did not lose the bees.
He was able to keep them on various pieces of property and continue
with bee culture, since it is not dependent on stable locations
as are horses, chickens, goats, gardens, and orchards.
In 1990, he invented and began
marketing world-wide the SuperUnfoundation bee frame. This was
well-received and selling well when the price of wood doubled
and then tripled. It suddenly cost more for the raw materials
than he could get selling the finished frames, and he was out
of business. Never one to accept things "as they are"
and being much more interested in the health of the bees than
in their produce, he is developing an apiculture system to allow
the bees to actualize their true potential vitality and really
solve the varroa and many other bee problems.
Simon has no hobbies, having
followed Henry David Thoreau's advice to make one's vocation
and avocation one. He operates a one-man bee and wasp removal
service and cares for bees in several locations. (http://charlesmartinsimon.com/stinging-insects.htm)
He also helps people overcome disease and get healthy and stay
healthy. (http://HealthEnlightenment.com)
And he writes, currently with twelve books in print. He self-publishes,
executes every part of the book process himself: conceives, writes,
edits, designs, formats, prints, cuts, binds each volume by hand.
His books are in stock in a few bookstores and available from
all bookstores via the ISBN system, but he sells mostly direct
to the public at http://charlesmartinsimon.com
|