Thank you so much for replying and sharing your knowledge Much appreciated
subhi
2 Jun 16#9
Your best chance is the local bee keeping association, they will put you in touch with amateur bee keepers, if you're looking for commercial bee keepers (Bigger scale) contact the local person from the Bee farming association.
jellybeans12
24 May 162#8
Is there a beekeepers site/directory you could share please?
sul
23 May 163#7
i agree. this honey isn't as pure as you think. read up on how its farmed and you'll understand why
subhi
23 May 166#6
As someone who sells honey for a living, find a local beekeeper and buy local honey. Check the label on the supermarket honey.
"Blend of EU and non EU honey" Price £1.20+ for 340g (12oz)
"Blend of non-EU honey" Around £1 for 340g (12oz)
A lot of the honey you get is imported from China and South America. Buy local, you WILL notice the difference in taste. Unfortunately quality costs money.
fishmaster
23 May 16#5
Ah well here's a brilliant little collaboration she did some time ago >
Opening post
Cheaper than supermarkets own brands honey.
10 comments
"Blend of EU and non EU honey" Price £1.20+ for 340g (12oz)
"Blend of non-EU honey" Around £1 for 340g (12oz)
A lot of the honey you get is imported from China and South America. Buy local, you WILL notice the difference in taste. Unfortunately quality costs money.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wqCpjFMvz-k
Have fun :smiley: