We have honey!!

After a two week hiatus from the market and a two year hiatus from selling honey, we finally were able to harvest a large batch for this season. Soooooooo happy about it!! This year’s batch is perfect — light-amber in color with a sweet, floral taste. Not too mild, not too strong. (Craig’s calling 2021’s harvest the “Goldilocks Batch.”) ๐Ÿ™‚

For anyone who is new to Windtree Bee, welcome! You can read more about us here but basically, we’re backyard beekeepers who have a small one-acre apiary in Parkton, Maryland. We started selling honey a few years ago at the Hereford Farm Market and other local places. We’re not commercial beekeepers. We don’t travel around the country with our bees boxed up in a hot truck hauling them from monocrop to monocrop to pollinate on-demand. Instead, we have only a handful of hives. Except for giving them a sturdy Langstroth hive to live in and treating for varroa after the season’s harvest, we let our bees do their thing. They fly free, foraging for pollen and nectar wherever the wind and their little wings take them. They pollinate whatever crop or plants they feel like pollinating.

Our bees are our partners

It’s important to us that our hives are as healthy as they can be, so we never harvest all the honey that the bees make. We leave enough for them to over winter. If we had harvested every drop of honey our bees made this year, we might make more money at the market, but then they wouldn’t have enough food to make it through winter. We could feed them sugar water, but that’s like feeding your kid only Pop Tarts from September through December. How healthy would they be by January? (And the lead up to spring is the time the bees need to be at their healthiest and strongest. That’s when the queen needs to be laying brood and pumping up the hive’s numbers so they can be ready for spring foraging.)

Bee-loved flowers

We plant lots of flowers for our bees: zinnias, black-eyed Susans, lavender, bee balm, etc. If you’re interested in buying a “Bee-loved Bouquet” from me, let me know! Bouquets would be one-of-a-kind and full of whatever is blooming that day — hand-picked and arranged by me. (Expect a casual cottage bouquet in a mason jar or thrift store glass vase. Don’t expect something that looks like it came from a professional florist! ๐Ÿ˜‰ ) For various reasons, I won’t be selling flowers at the market this year, so the only way to get Windtree Bee flowers this summer is to reach out!! Prices will vary based on bouquet size, bloom freshness, and whether I’m delivering the bouquet or you’re picking it up.

What else will we have at the market tomorrow?

Peach Preserves made with fresh, local peaches from Shaw’s Orchard and our own honey!! I’ve made jams with honey before, but not with our “2021 Goldilocks Batch”!!! ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚

Pineapple Preserves, a.k.a. home-canned pineapple, which is THE BEST. There are only two ingredients — fresh pineapple and simple syrup.

Chocolate Raspberry Sauce. I’ve made a few chocolate jams this summer. This one is specially made to pair with ice cream!!! ๐Ÿ˜€

I also have new, gorgeous suncatchers from my niece & nephew’s glazier grandma, Mary Nolan. She designs beautiful, bespoke bee and honeycomb glass for me.


See you at the market tomorrow! We’ll be at the Hereford Farm Market, 17004 York Road, in Parkton, Maryland, from 9:00 a.m. until noon. Look for us at the “Hats & Honey” table beside The Contented Rooster.

Interested in a Windtree Bee flower bouquet? Use the form below to let me know!

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