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Busy as a bee: Eastaboga Bee Company tackles more than honey

Busy as a bee: Eastaboga Bee Company tackles more than honey

13. April, 2015|News Updates|No comments

ann star

With his dog, Jake, by his side and a smoker in his hands, Justin Hill is only slightly joking when he says his coworkers are honeybees. He doesn’t need to wear gloves anymore, but pulls on his veiled hat as he laughs and says, “Let’s go charm a bee.”

The owner of Eastaboga Bee Company began keeping bees on his 300-acre farm six years ago. A fourth-generation farmer, Hill was already growing fruits and vegetables and raising horses and cattle, but he was eager to try something new.

“I think there are a lot of people that do this as a hobby, but I don’t know that a lot of people do it to make money,” he said. “I was looking for another way to diversify. It’s just like any other small business venture except I’m a farmer, too.”

Hill had the time and the space, but knew nothing about honeybees. He started reading books about beekeeping, and met with beekeepers from across the state to learn from their experience. He has learned a lot along the way, but says he’s still learning.

“Everything changes daily, weekly,” Hill said. “The challenge that you had last week is not the challenge you’re going to have this week.”

In the beginning, the greatest challenge to the self-taught beekeeper was simply getting over the fear of handling the bees to harvest the honey, Hill said. He tried to concentrate on everything he learned and to remember everything he read, but when he heard the buzz of thousands of angry honeybees, his natural instinct told him to run. He didn’t though, and now, after years of harvesting honey, Hill has 80 beehives on his farm.

“I just try to give them a great environment to flourish,” Hill said. “You can’t make them grow, but if you set them up with everything they need, they will grow.”

Hill’s honeybees make their home in white painted boxes built from trees that fell during the April 2011 storms. Most of the boxes are grouped together, while a few sit alone in the distance under the trees where Hill captured their swarms.

With all his hives, Hill quickly realized he could sell more than just jars of raw honey. As he had done before, Hill taught himself to make new products through trial and error, and a lot of reading. He said he threw away trash cans full of trials gone badly until he eventually got it right.

“I was just so proud to have made something,” he said.

In addition to honey, Eastaboga Bee Company now sells multiple products, including soaps, lotions and lip balms. One of the most popular products is the vanilla-scented body butter made with cocoa butter and beeswax. All of Hill’s honey creations can be found in co-ops and at festivals throughout the state, and can be purchased on the company’s website, eastabogabeecompany.com, as well. Hill’s honey is also used in other locally produced products like Richard Sherrod’s Angry Apricot Mustard sauce, and in Cheaha Brewing Company’s Heather Ale. Since branching out, Hill has seen an increase in sales both online and in specialty stores that carry his products.

One such store belongs to Susan Smith, owner of Girlfriends in Oxford, who says the honey is the most popular Eastaboga Bee Company product they sell.

“People buy it because it’s made locally,” she said. “Those that have bought it have come back for more. Several of us in the shop buy it and use it ourselves.”

Hill hopes to one day open a store of his own where people can learn about honeybees while trying his products. He has some new products in the works, including a hair balm that will be available this summer.

Hill plans to stop at 300 hives because “that’s all one or two people can do,” he said. In the meantime, he will continue adding hives and searching for ways to protect his honeybees from the same threats facing every beekeeper — mites and disease, for instance, can destroy an entire colony.

In the last few years, studies conducted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture have found the honeybee population is decreasing, which the department says threatens crop yields because “bee pollination is responsible for more than $15 billion in increased crop value each year.” No single cause has been determined, but according to the USDA website, scientists believe it could be a combination of pathogens, parasites, stress and pollen scarcity.

Hill said he likes to think he is helping the bees, even if he is only playing a small part.

“It’s not why I started doing this, but it’s nice to think I might be making a difference,” he said.

He offers everyone the same advice — advice that might just help them and the honeybees at the same time: “Plant a flower and call your mother.”

By: Laura Monroe

http://www.annistonstar.com/life/busy-as-a-bee-eastaboga-bee-company-tackles-more-than/article_ac5a8604-e8a5-11e3-8bc1-0019bb2963f4.html

 

Thirsty Thursday: Hot Toddies and Alabama Honey

Thirsty Thursday: Hot Toddies and Alabama Honey

23. March, 2014|News Updates|No comments

With record frigid temperatures blanketing the Deep South, it’s human nature to hibernate within the comforts of our home, preferably with a hot beverage and good book. Hot toddies are my favorite winter cocktail, as one usually has the ingredients lying around the kitchen: citrus, honey, cinnamon, and bourbon or rum. A variety of spices and spirits can be mixed; the only thing I’m picky about is my honey. It’s pretty common knowledge that local, raw honey can help combat allergies, but I make a special allowance for honey from the Eastaboga Bee Company in Lincoln, Alabama.

Justin Hill is the sole owner, and was selected as the 2013 Outstanding Young Farm Family in the Bee & Honey Division at the Young Farmers Leadership Conference last February. Being an avid bee fan and hopeful apiary-owner in the future, I wanted to know his story. Justin’s farm is located just five miles from NASCAR mecca Talladega, but his 300 acres is anything but raucous. A fourth-generation farmer on his family’s land, Justin decided to expand beyond his cattle and horses by adding hives around the property a couple years ago. Now in his fifth year, Justin is a completely self-taught apiarist and sells his raw, unpasteurized honey in and around town. He also makes homemade, preservative-free honey products, and notes the eucalyptus furniture polish is particularly great at keeping away dust mites.

Photo courtesy of ALFA Farmers Federation.
Photo courtesy of ALFA Farmers Federation.

Justin says, “It all started one afternoon. [Beekeeping] was a hobby of mine and I wanted to expand the existing farm. Instead of buying more land (which wasn’t feasible because I was broke), I thought I could put bees in places where we already have land and create a new avenue of income. I now have 41 hives. That’s probably somewhere around a half-million bees.”

His secret is to read a lot of books, go to a couple classes, and then just “stay up real late and don’t pull your hair out. If you’re so inclined, you can do a little cussing.” Sounds like good advice to me. Justin’s honey is found throughout co-ops in Alabama as well. He noted Big Daddy’s BBQ in Munford uses his product in a honey mustard sauce, and the Cheaha Brewing Company uses his honey in their beer.

Written by: Lindsey Kate Reynolds

Link to story: http://www.southernfoodways.org/thirsty-thursday-hot-toddies-and-alabama-honey/

ALFA Farmers on Eastaboga Buzz

ALFA Farmers on Eastaboga Buzz

11. March, 2014|Homepage, Miscellaneous, News Updates, Press and Media|No comments

Eastaboga Bee Co. is buzzing with more than just honey. The Calhoun County business is branching out with sweet-smelling new products,

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Quality Products = Eastaboga Bee Company

Quality Products = Eastaboga Bee Company

10. March, 2014|Homepage, Miscellaneous, News Updates, Products|No comments

Just a few of the Fine Products sold by Eastaboga Bee Company!!

CALL TO ORDER TODAY  –  (256) 294-4313

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Bee Company Operates in a New Erra

Bee Company Operates in a New Erra

21. April, 2013|Homepage, Miscellaneous, News Updates, Products|No comments

Welcome to the Eastaboga Bee Company and our official website!

We are located in Lincoln/Eastaboga, Alabama. Just 5 minutes from the world-famous, Talladega SuperSpeedway!

Eucalyptus Wood Polish –  This is Good Stuff!!!!