About · Since 2013

Two hives, a kitchen, and a sign at the end of the driveway.

That's how this started. We still run it like that, just bigger. Forty-two hives, a kitchen built for jarring, and a website instead of a sign.

In 2013, my husband bought me a starter hive for my birthday because I'd been complaining about not having a hobby. He thought I'd quit by August. I didn't.

One hive turned into two, then four, then a problem. By 2015 we had more honey than we could give away. The neighbors took some. My mother took a lot. We still had ten gallons in the garage.

So I made labels on the computer, jarred everything, and set up a folding table at the end of the driveway with a hand-painted sign that said HONEY $8. It sold out in a weekend.

That was eleven years ago. We're still small. We still jar every batch ourselves. The difference is now we have forty-two hives across three pastures, a real kitchen, a tagline that makes my kids roll their eyes, and a customer in Vermont who orders six jars at Christmas every year without fail.

We do one thing. We sell only what we keep. If a season is short, the shop goes empty until next year. We've never bought wholesale honey, blended in cheaper varietals, or heat-treated a jar to make it pretty on the shelf. We won't.

That's the whole business. Hi, I'm Bri. Welcome.

What we won't do

A short list of things we promise never to start doing.

  1. i.

    We won't blend.

    If a jar says clover, it's clover. Not "wildflower with clover notes." Not blended for consistency. One pull, one varietal, one jar.

  2. ii.

    We won't heat.

    Heat makes honey look prettier and ship easier. It also strips out the enzymes and pollen that make raw honey worth eating. Ours stays cold from comb to jar.

  3. iii.

    We won't buy wholesale.

    If we run out of buckwheat in November, the buckwheat listing comes down until next September. We'd rather have an empty shelf than honey we didn't make.

  4. iv.

    We won't get big.

    We've turned down two distributors and one restaurant chain. The day this business needs an assistant beekeeper is the day it stops being what it is.

Kind mentions

  • Garden & Gun
  • Cherry Bombe
  • Southern Living
  • Edible Nashville
  • Local NPR

Come see how a jar gets here.

We wrote out the whole process, from hive to porch. It's a short read.