Skip to main content

Order Honey

Pure Hawaiian Honey

Order Honey

Our honey is gently and humanely harvested comb by comb.  Made from Hawaiian flower nectars the bees gather in pristine mountain and coastal forests, our varietal honey is among the rarest and highest quality in the world.  Because we harvest only when it is beneficial for the bees, quantities are limited.  Please use the form below to place an order.

Order Honey

About Our Honey~The Gold Standard

This rare varietal honey is so precious and pure! It takes the nectar of five million tiny flowers to produce a single pound. Our honey is treated as a sacred substance and is minimally processed to maintain its purity and high vibration. We add nothing but prayers of gratitude and love, knowing we are helping the bees make medicine for the world.

Honey and other bee products are available locally at Artemis Smiles Sanctuary on the Big Island, and in downtown Kailua-Kona at

Bee Boys Bee Space ~ 74-5606 Pawai Pl # 104 Kailua-Kona, HI 96740

Honey is available for shipping in food safe packaging, at $16/lb and shipped via USPS, priority mail.  To order please fill out the form and include desired quantity (number of pounds) in the message section along with any special directions or inquiries.  Order confirmation and payment details will be provided prior to shipping.

Small:  Minimum 2 lbs up to 6 lbs, plus $10 S&H

Medium: up to 20 lbs,  plus $20 S&H

Large: up to 35 lbs plus $25 S&H

International shipping available, where allowed by law.

Use the message space in the form below to enquire about availability of additional bee products: Bee Bread, Whole Comb (as pictured), Candles, Propolis.

 

 

About Our Honey~The Gold Standard

Order Honey

What makes our honey “the best I’ve ever tasted!”

Foraging in wilderness areas, free of pesticides and herbicides, our bees gather nectar from different plants at different times of the year.  Because they like to focus on one ‘nectar flow’ at a time, we are able to produce some of the rarest single-floral varietals in the world.

The colonies at the Sanctuary are so strong and healthy, they fill their hives to overflowing with great golden combs of bright yellow honey known for its butterscotch flavor, silky texture and healing properties. Because the bees here gather nectar and make honey year-round, it is beneficial to them when we harvest honeycombs periodically to free up space in the brood chamber.  The brood chamber is where the queen lays eggs and the nurse bees raise the young larvae until they go through metamorphosis and hatch out as adult bees.

When we open space by removing the older combs, the bees eat nectar, produce bright yellow wax  from their wax glands and build fresh combs to raise more babies. When we harvest honey in this way we help the bees keep their nursery fresh and clean and free of any pesticide residues, disease spores and pests such as varroa mites.

Our bees make their own honeycombs (rather than build onto plastic frames as is common elsewhere) and we harvest each comb by hand, carefully and gently removing every bee as we go. At the ‘Honey House’ the combs are squeezed by hand, lightly strained and bottled or bagged for shipping.

What makes our honey "the best I've ever tasted!"

Testimonials


Marion Deschenes, Canada

I am a traveller who came to Big Island in hope to meet the bees and to learn all about them. How grateful I am to have met Alison! I spent 3 weeks with her in beautiful Ka’u. Not only did I have the chance to learn how she respectfully takes care of “her babies”, but I also got to witness her spiritual ways of talking and interacting with them. Her philosophy and practices deeply resonated for me, as I knew deep down in my heart, that it is possible to care for bees without all the fuss of bee suits, expensive equipment and medications. I also got to participate in a highly complex bee rescue and relocation – a wonderful hive thriving in a small cave under a house, whose owners had tried to kill them by smothering them with a ton of poisonous ‘insect killer’ powder. Let’s say that I was shown just as much love and devotion when she crawled down there to take them out. That experience in mind forever, I go back to Quebec with love in my heart for the bees in my future apiary.