Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Bees and their beehive
Bees and their beehive - Credit: michaflo / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Crime
1-1-2
Tech
Nature
Almere
bees
arson
arsonists
arsonist
fire
112
adult crime suspects
Thursday, 9 October 2025 - 12:00

Share this article:

Half a million bees killed in fire suspected as arson at Almere park

A fire in Beatrixpark in Almere has destroyed ten beehives and killed around half a million bees, in what police say was likely arson. The hives, owned by local beekeeper Harold Stringer, were completely burned Tuesday evening, leaving behind only charred remains, Omroep Flevoland reports.

Stringer, who has kept bees at the same location for nine years, was visibly shaken upon his return to the site. “The thought that someone would do this is terrible,” he told Omroep Flevoland. “I’ve always had positive contact with people here. I never had problems with anyone." Stringer estimates the loss at around 7,000 euros and no suspect has been identified.

The hives stood on wooden pallets behind a small fence, covered by a roof structure in a quiet, wooded section of Beatrixpark often used by joggers and walkers.

“This is no coincidence,” Stringer told Omroep Flevoland. “My ten colonies are gone. The bees I’ve worked on for years are gone forever.”

Police confirmed Wednesday that they suspect arson. Officers from the Almere West Poort police unit are investigating and have called on witnesses to come forward.

Although small fires have been set in Beatrixpark before, Stringer said those incidents typically involved playground equipment far from his hives. “This is the quiet part of the forest,” he said, standing amid the ashes. “Now it just smells of burnt wood. Asian hornets are already flying around, trying to steal honey and carry off a few bees.”

Stringer said he has never received complaints about his bees. “That can hardly be the reason,” he told the newspaper. “I’ve never had a single complaint, and my phone number is posted next to the hives.”

Friends have encouraged the beekeeper to start a crowdfunding campaign to rebuild his colonies, though he is unsure how to begin. “You don’t get colonies like that back easily,” he said. “It took years to build them up.”

More like this

Image
The front of a Dutch fire department vehicle in 2022
Gunfire at Barendrecht McDonald’s followed by nearby van arson
Image
Firefighters at the scene
Three homes destroyed in Uden fire; arson suspected, no injuries reported
Image
Firefighters at the scene
Arson suspected in large fire at Utrecht gym
Image
A firefighter prepares a hose.
Car crashes into Hoogeveen town hall, driver arrested on arson and vandalism charges
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Netherlands will only feel impact of SpaceX IPO in long term
  • Dutch Prime Minister expected to apologize to Moluccan community at monument unveiling
  • Study finds package holiday prices often higher than advertised; Industry disputes claim
  • Small group behind nationwide surge in violent anti-asylum protests, analysis finds
  • Over 800,000 Dutch living in increasingly warm areas without enough trees, greenery

Top stories

  • Negligence alleged in crash that killed 3 kids, school principal biking in Zeeland
  • Netherlands bans gay conversion therapy after Senate majority backs new law
  • Video: Boy riding fatbike shot in front of Gouda grocery store
  • Boy, 2, dies after fall from window of Rotterdam home
  • Amsterdam to tackle discrimination, violent incidents with priority during World Pride

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content