Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Raw Honey - What is it and can you find it at the big box store?

It's been a steep learning curve since those first 2 packages of Georgia bees arrived in 2012.  One thing I've learned for sure- I have NO aspirations for becoming a commercial beekeeper. I'd rather just try to be good at fulfilling a small local niche.  It's a lot more fun that way when the goal is not necessarily to drive maximum profit from a bee hive. For all you college business majors out there, that must sound really absurd. The truth is that there's just something a lot more personally fulfilling to providing local products that you can't find on Amazon or WalMart or some other big box store. Things that require some aspects of quality and local craftsmanship. I think about the things we can find at the local farmers markets like local produce, fruits and vegetables, homemade jams and jellies, things like that come to mind.

Perhaps that same approach may also apply to beekeeping in some ways when you look at store bought vs local honey and bee products.  For us, keeping bees has been a treatment-free approach since day 1 however it seems the key to making it work is persistence while continuing to find replacement colonies through splits and capturing localized swarms in traps during the late April/May season.  These "rescued" bees as I call them become the foundation for the following year's splits and honey crop. This year we captured 12 new swarms to go with last years winter survivors which themselves got a big jump on the early nectar flows we had this year.

We have as close to an "all natural" approach to keeping bees as possible short of keeping them in hollow logs. It's still important that to harvest honey with minimal stress to the colony that we provide them with standard frames. The Langstroth hive still is the best design, most effective for pulling frames for inspection or harvesting honey.  However, we do not use commercial foundation in the frames rather the bees draw their own comb from the natural nectar found in nature. We do not use miticides (pesticides) or use treatments of any sort in an attempt to deal with varroa. The bees will deal with varroa on their own if we let them.

The honey is truly RAW- It's unheated, untreated, unpasteurized, unfiltered and unadulterated. Honey that comes straight out of the hive and is spun out of frames, coarsely strained, and put into a container. Nothing is added, nothing is taken away.  Currently there are still a few of the 12 and 24 ounce containers of Smith Homestead's All Natural Raw Honey available at Village Hardware in Bethel, Ohio.  Did you know?... Village Hardware was recently named the #1 Hardware store in Ohio by Best Things Ohio https://bestthingsoh.com/hardware-stores/

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