Unheated, Unfiltered Honey from:
Brookfield Farm Bees and Honey in the foothills of Mount Baker and
From Other Independent Washington Beekeepers
Brookfield Farm Raw Honey:
Two honeys from Brookfield Farm’s up-river and down-river hives:
Raw Mountain Wildflower Honey
Raw Farm & Field Honey – Very Berry
Sold out – Check in fall for 2020 harvest
Scroll Down for E. WA honeys still available
Scroll Down to More Raw Honeys for Our Raw Honeys From Independent Washington Beekeepers
Brookfield Farm’s
Raw, Unheated, Unfiltered Honey from Naturally Treated Hives
Predator Friendly: we use Livestock Guard Dogs at the farm and electric bear fences in outlying bee yards. We share these lands with wildlife, it is our responsibility to keep both the bees and their animal predators safe.
More Raw Washington Honeys from Independent Beekeepers :
Stillaguamish River Wildflower – NW Washington – Northwest Queens
Sold Out – check in fall for 2020 harvest
Independence Valley Wildflower – west Washington – Hive 5 Bees
Sold Out – check in fall for 2020 harvest
Highlands Wildflower – NE Washington – Kraus Honey Company
Alfalfa-Wildflower – South Washington – K Brothers Pollination and Honey
Blue Mountains Wildflower – SE Washington – K Brothers
Chamisa / Mixed Flowers – South Washington – K Brothers
Buckwheat – South Washington – K Brothers
Product Prices and Availability
FIND OUR HONEYS AT:
Ballard Farmers Market, Seattle
Retail Outlets
Shipping:
We also ship within the United States. We normally ship via FedEx:
Price of shipping is:
FedEx charges
plus $2.00 that FedEx charges for their box
plus $5.00 packing charge
If you need an alternate shipping method, please let us know.
Shipping costs depend on the weight of order and the destination
FREE Home Delivery to Bellingham & locations along the Mt. Baker Highway
iam looking to buy some fresh bee pollen from west of the cascades. thank you. linda
I wish I could find someone who is doing pollen. But I don’t know anyone who is gathering and selling direct. If you find someone, please let me know.
I purchased some Alfalfa – wildflower honey at the Lynden Crafts and Antique show recently
I live in Birch Bay – where can I purchase more?
Great Honey!!
Thank You
Lynnette
Hi Lynnette – that’s lovely honey isn’t it? Stan’s a great beekeeper. We sell the alfalfa-wildflower honey (and our other fabulous raw honeys) at the Bellingham Farmers Market — every Saturday 10-3pm (http://www.bellinghamfarmers.org). You can also find the alfalfa-wildflower at both of the Bellingham Coops (http://www.communityfood.coop) Perhaps I’ll see you at the farmers market
Hi! I bought a jar of your wonderful honey earlier this year when you were at the market. So sorry that they gave you no choice but to leave! I was wondering if you sell any of your wildflower honeys in bigger than the 3 lb quart jar? I use honey for a lot of things! I live in Birch Bay, so I could come pick it up instead of worrying about shipping.
Thank you!
Amber
Hi Amber – did I answer you via email? I hope so, it’s been a bit crazed here. I don’t even sell quart jars of my honey, only pounds. But I do have wonderful raw honey from the naturally treated antibiotic-free hives of my friends: Raspberry/Wildflower (this side of the mountains); Blue Mountain Wildflower and chamisa (east side). Alfalfa/Wildflower’s coming soon. I can do drop-offs for free in Bellingham if you’ve a friend there.
I’m right this instant eating your crystallized chamisa/wildflowers honey from K Brothers. With a spoon, from the jar. It’s tremendously good. I buy at the Ballard market. I noticed that one of your offerings written on the blackboard in the photo you have from the Ballard market, is cappings. I’m guessing this is only available seasonally? Please tell me everything about this, I LOVE cappings.
Cappings Chews are collected during extraction, so jars at harvest, then going down in number as folks buy them. They are wax, pollen, propolis, and a little honey. They are chewed like gum (you can swallow them, or spit them into a tissue and dispose properly). How we get them: Honey is not honey on the comb unless it is capped – cappings are beeswax. The cappings must be removed to expose the honey before the honey is extracted. These drop into the cappings tub, along with their pollen, propolis and honey. Also pieces spin off during in the extractor, and rise to the top of the bucket or are strained out as the honey leaves the extractor (depends on beekeeper’s preference.