Photos from our Apiary
Each hive supports a remarkable community of around 50,000 bees, functioning together as a single, highly organised colony.
At the base of the hive is the brood box, the true heart of the colony. This is where the queen lives and lays her eggs, and where young bees are raised through their early stages of life. The brood box also holds essential reserves of pollen and honey to sustain the developing brood.
Above the brood box sit one or more stacked boxes fitted with removable frames. These are known as supers and are used exclusively for honey storage. As nectar flows increase through the season, the bees steadily fill these frames with honey. When fully capped and ready for harvest, each super can weigh up to 25 kg, a testament to the colony’s productivity.
Last year, each hive carried 10 supers, an exceptional yield by any standard.
We harvest our honey twice a year—once in the spring and again later in the summer. Each harvest is subtly different in both colour and flavour, reflecting the changing landscape as the bees forage on spring blossoms and summer flowers.
Elizabeth. Our main Queen
This is how you start a hive, with a good 6 frame Nuc
Catching a swarm
Brood - baby bee eggs
Honey capped and ready to extract
The bees filled up an entire brood box last year, we couldn't lift it off the hive
Honey capped and ready to extract
A swam tried to move into one of our hives
Fresh eggs
New hives being put together for 2026
Swarm catcher
Feeding the bees during the cold winter
New hive location in Gun Hill
Treating the bees against infections in winter.
Checking on the winter Nuc’s
Bee visit
Lots of supers
Try this on in the heat of summer.
Our new processing room is taking shape
Our 31 year old delivery van
Unheated, unblended, and untouched by modern process
Premium Single Hive Honey
Online orders getting ready to ship out
Website sales ready to go out
Coffee simply tastes better in one of our mugs.
Weekends often look like this