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Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Florida Panhandle Honey

Florida Tupelo honey  is one of the rarest honeys with an exquisite buttery flavor and light color. Tuplelo trees thrive along the rivers and creeks of the Florida panhandle and have delicate fragrant blossoms that can produce wonderful honey crops.
The Florida Tupelo flower is very delicate and blooms for only a very short time every year. Our beekeepers go through great lengths to keep our Florida tupelo honey pure by taking all the honey boxes off the hives and putting on clean empty beewax combs right as the first tupelo flowers bloom. After about two weeks of bloom, we go out and take the honey boxes off the hives and spin it out to get the rare tupelo honey.
The Tupelo blossoms have very delicate little pistols that secrete the nectar. A strong wind or hard rain can rip the blossoms from the trees.The blossoming period generally starts about the 20th of April every year and lasts about 3 weeks. The honeybees are very eager to visit the blossoms, as the nectar can be quite abundant in good years. Tupelo trees thrive in the river and creek bottoms where it is very wet.
Kirk took this picture from the top of a bridge on the Hard Labor creek by our bee farm to capture this honeybee in the Tupelo treetop.


The best Tupelo honey producing region in the world exists in the Florida panhandle along the Appalachicola, Chipola, and Choctahatchie River systems of creeks and backwaters.
Real Tupelo honey is a light golden amber color with a greenish cast. The flavor is quite delicious, buttery and distinctive; a choice honey. Good tupelo, unmixed with other honeys, will not granulate. Some diabetic patients have been permitted by their physicians to eat Tupelo honey. Average analysis: fructose 44.03% glucose 29.97%.

To make the best Tupelo honey, the beekeeper has to remove any honeycombs of honey off the hives from other nectar sources such as highbush Gallberry or Ti Ti. Then the beekeeper must place on new boxes of empty combs so the incoming nectar will be kept separate from other honeys.
We spin out all the honey collected in Florida with this stainless steel automatic honey extracting line made by Cowen manufacturing. All the honey is stored in 55 gallon drums until it is put into bottles.
We have a bee farm in the Vernon, Florida area where we send the bees to be distributed throughout the Florida panhandle every winter.
Our skilled beekeepers start to prepare the honeybees on the winter solstice by giving them supplemental feed and pollen patties to stimulate the queen bees to start raising young bees(brood) to build up large colonies to make new hives for making Tupelo. We raise our own queen bees from special breeding stock picked for desirable characteristics such as prolific nectar gathering, gentleness, and disease resistance.
In the summer all the bees go to northern Michigan to make Star Thistle honey, another premium honey.

Rights United States Census Bureau 1990©

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