Buy LOCAL Honey

Local HONEY is fresh, and tastes great!  It is made by bees collecting nectar from flowers near you!

Supporting local beekeepers, supports local bees!

Some local beekeepers also use bee-made-materials to produce products like CANDLES SOAPS LIP BALM SKIN BALMS, CANDIES BEESWAX,  POLLEN and PROPOLIS.

Look for a beekeeper near you!

( MCBA  does not screen or endorse beekeepers or their products.)

HINT: To filter the list to show only the product you seek, change the dropdown box from "Selling All These..." to a specific product, then click "Apply Filter"

Selling These LOCAL HIVE Products
 

75 records

Displaying 31–60 of 75  1 2 3
City Zipcode First name Last name Email Selling These LOCAL HIVE Products First Role
Hyattsville20781MaggieMillsHoney, Beeswax, Pollen, Creamed Honey, Skin Balm, Lip Balm, Soap, PropolisLifetime Member
Hyattsville20783LindsayBoothHoney, Beeswax, PropolisAnnual Member
Laurel20708KimberlyMehalickHoney, Creamed Honey, Candles, Skin Balm, Lip Balm, SoapLifetime Member
Laytonsville20882TracyWatermanCandles, Skin Balm, Lip BalmLifetime Member
Melrose Park19027NicholasLodise IIIHoney, Beeswax, Pollen, PropolisLifetime Member
North Potomac20878AriBenjaminsonHoneyLifetime Member
North Potomac20878FredMulfordHoneyAnnual Member
North Potomac20878AmirNaeemiHoney, CandyAnnual Member
Olney20832MaryMcQueenHoney, Candles, Skin Balm, Lip Balm, SoapAnnual Member
Poolesville20837FredNicholsHoneyLifetime Member
Poolesville20837JoeLongHoney, Beeswax, CandlesAnnual Member
Potomac20854JohnFergusonHoney, BeeswaxAnnual Member
Potomac20854GuySemmesHoney, BeeswaxLifetime Member
Rockville20850ScottButterworthHoneyAnnual Member
Rockville20850KeithRyea SrHoneyAnnual Member
Rockville20852BobDeVolHoneyAnnual Member
Rockville20853MarieBellHoneyAnnual Member
Rockville20853JessicaKarunaratneSoapAnnual Member
Rockville20853DonEnglishBeeswaxLifetime Member
Salisbury15558ROGERWILTROUTHoneyAnnual Member
Sandy Spring20860StephenMeffordHoneyLifetime Member
Savage20763EricMalcolmHoney, Candles, SoapLifetime Member
Silver spring20910GerryJohnstonHoneyAnnual Member
Silver spring20910RyanEicherHoney, Creamed Honey, Lip BalmLifetime Member
Silver Spring20901MartinHindelHoneyAnnual Member
Silver Spring20901SamerCarter-HibaHoneyAnnual Member
Silver Spring20901RenataHoffstetterHoney, Beeswax, Skin Balm, PropolisAnnual Member
Silver Spring20902JohnGipsonHoneyAnnual Member
Silver Spring20902JenniferMaroney HurstHoneyAnnual Member
Silver Spring20902LenGreigHoneyLifetime Member
Displaying 31–60 of 75  1 2 3

Montgomery County Agricultural Fair

Every year our association has a stand at the Montgomery County Agricultural Fair where our member sell their honey and other products.

Also at the Fair, we do beekeeping demonstrations and  have an observation hive that allows you to see the bees at work.  Hope to see you there!


 Honey Bee Products Primer

Honey:

Cremed Honey in a Moscow Market

A colony of honey bees must collect nectar from two million flowers to make a pound of honey! The bees store honey to eat when nectar is scarce. Luckily for us, they make more honey than they need, so beekeepers can share they bounty. CREMED HONEY is 100% honey with nothing added. It is converted into a white, smooth, spreadable consistency by a special mixing process.
Remember: Honey should not be fed to infants less than 12 months old.



Beeswax:

Block of refined beeswax at Moscow market

Honey bees excrete tiny plates of wax from glands on the underside of their abdomens. Honey bees use this wax to create wax comb, the hexagonal (six-sided) cells used to store nectar, pollen, and to raise new bees. People use beeswax to make candles, lip balm, soap, etc. Fun Fact: To make one pound of wax, bees need to collect 40 pounds of nectar!



Pollen:

Jars of Pollen Pellets at street fair in Italy

Pollen grains are microscopic cells that plants use to propagate. Pollen is rich in protein, so honey bees collect pollen from blossoms to feed their young. To carry millions of pollen grains home in one trip, honey bees moisten them with a lick of honey and paste them, layer upon layer, to special hairs on their hind legs. At the colony, honey bees store the pollen in their wax honeycomb cells. To collect pollen from honey bees, beekeepers temporarily reduce the size of the hive entrance with special screens. The bees carrying pollen balls cannot fit though the holes in the screen unless they remove the pollen balls, which then fall into a collection bin.


Propolis:

Propolis is a sticky glue bees use to caulk gaps in their hive. They make it using plant resins or sap from tree buds mixed with honey and saliva.

Fun Fact: Propolis also has anti-germ properties that help keep the hive healthy.