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Our season begins sometime in late
March or early April, depending on the weather. As soon as it's mild
enough, we take the beehives out of their cold room in the barn and place
them in a sunny, sheltered location. They are fed artificial pollen
made from soy, and sucrose syrup until there is nectar being produced.
Our earliest plants in this area are wild plum, wolf willow, dandelion,
leafy spurge, poplar and maple. None but the plum are pleasant for
honey at all. In late May, we sometimes take a few hives to our
neighbours' farm orchards to collect apple honey. This has the most
delicate flavour, and if you've ever wished you could taste the smell of
an apple blossom, this is how to do it.
Most larger honey producers rely on canola, as
it produces a very heavy honey crop. We don't tend to prefer the
flavour, or the increasingly genetically-modified source. For shipping bulk honey, we will sort the darker canola and
other less desirable flavours into large barrels. This is what you
would get in the store. For our "customer
honey," or farm-gate sales, we set aside better-tasting alfalfa and clover honeys.
Interestingly, one of our
customers indicated to us that his diabetes was adversely affected by most
honeys, including clover, but not by the alfalfa honey we sold him.
Honey is a complex substance, and is almost totally sugar, but each plant
produces different ratios of complex sugars. It's not at all like
refined table sugar.
What do we do
differently with our honey? We don't use direct heat.
We scratch the wax cappings off our frames rather than using a hot knife,
and store our honey promptly. Placing honey in the freezer maintains
a fresher taste. All our customer honey stays in a large freezer
until we deliver it.
The alfalfa honey we sell is not what you'll
get in the supermarket. Every so often when we're shopping, we'll
open a container labelled "pure alfalfa honey," smell it, and wrinkle
our noses. It's unfortunate what people pay for. You may not be in
our market area, but we encourage you to get in touch with a local honey
producer near you and get the real deal. Bulk processing, particularly
heating the honey to make it flow through large equipment systems, takes a
noticeable toll on the product.
how to get honey from
Lazy Creek Honey Farm
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