Helms Honey

Helms Honey Helms Honey is a backyard apiary along the train tracks in Church Hill, TN.

Helms Honey is a locally owned and operated apiary selling honey and bee-based products straight from the hive.

Today was a very proud moment for Helms Honey.  Our 3 year old daughter helped inspect the bees for the first time.  She...
08/26/2018

Today was a very proud moment for Helms Honey. Our 3 year old daughter helped inspect the bees for the first time. She did such a great job and smiled and laughed the whole time.

Get 20% your Helms Honey Etsy purchase today only!!!
08/18/2018

Get 20% your Helms Honey Etsy purchase today only!!!

Helms Honey shirts are ready!!!  We hand screen print each one. The shirts are made from recycled plastic bottles and ar...
08/03/2018

Helms Honey shirts are ready!!! We hand screen print each one. The shirts are made from recycled plastic bottles and are so soft! Order yours today on Etsy!

Helms Honey Tees are here!  We screen printed each one ourselves. The shirts are so soft and made from recycled plastic ...
08/03/2018

Helms Honey Tees are here! We screen printed each one ourselves. The shirts are so soft and made from recycled plastic bottles! There are only a few left!!! Place your order before they are sold out.

Helms Honey - Support Local Beekeepers - Save Honey Bees - Shirts https://etsy.me/2LWGHHP

Not one, not two, but three new lip balm scents new today!!! At the Mercantile on Broad and State!  Pick up all three up...
07/26/2018

Not one, not two, but three new lip balm scents new today!!! At the Mercantile on Broad and State! Pick up all three up today!

07/15/2018

Deadline extended!!!!

You still have today to place your T-Shirt order!! Ordering today will guarantee that we will have a shirt for you, in the size of your choosing from our very first batch of Helms Honey screen prints. The shirts are a pale yellow (unlike the gold pictures) and made from recycled plastic bottles! More details in the listing.

Today is the last day to pre-order!

Helms Honey - Support Local Beekeepers - Save Honey Bees - Shirts https://etsy.me/2JmfxVD

Bee(keeper) Fact FridaySo much goes into honey.  Real local raw honey takes knowledge of bees, equipment to keep the bee...
07/13/2018

Bee(keeper) Fact Friday

So much goes into honey. Real local raw honey takes knowledge of bees, equipment to keep the bees, tons of equipment to extract honey, time in the hot hot summer sun, being covered in smoke and honey, and passion that won’t die even when you lose bees at a 75% rate yearly. Honey bees are up against pest, disease, pesticides, and dwindling food sources that make life exceedingly difficult for them. Beekeepers do their best to help the bee population, but the most important thing we can do is educate. The more people know the importance of the honey bee, the better their chances are of bouncing back from their steady disappearing rate. So plant some wildflowers, stop using harmful pesticides, and support your local beekeepers. Most of all if you are interested in bees, contact us. Ask questions and learn as much as you can!
Thank you all for a year of amazing support. We are so humbled by every experience we have had to talk to people about bees.

Pick up today’s Kingsport Times for a quick story about our beekeeping journey!
07/12/2018

Pick up today’s Kingsport Times for a quick story about our beekeeping journey!

To get a Helms Honey shirt from the first batch of printing, place your order no later than Friday!  We’re so excited to...
07/11/2018

To get a Helms Honey shirt from the first batch of printing, place your order no later than Friday! We’re so excited to start making these!!!

Shirts are $20 with $3 shipping. Send us a message before you order if you’d like to do a local pickup.

Helms Honey - Support Local Beekeepers - Save Honey Bees - Shirts https://etsy.me/2KRaOB3

Today we painted a Helms Honey trash barrel for Fun Fest!!!If you spot the barrel between July 13 - 21, post a picture o...
07/10/2018

Today we painted a Helms Honey trash barrel for Fun Fest!!!

If you spot the barrel between July 13 - 21, post a picture of the barrel and tag Helms Honey to receive a coupon for 50% off your purchase at either Mercantile location or an Etsy order!

Today we painted a Helms Honey trash barrel for Fun Fest!!!If you spot the barrel between July 13 - 21, post a picture o...
07/10/2018

Today we painted a Helms Honey trash barrel for Fun Fest!!!

If you spot the barrel between July 13 - 21, post a picture of the barrel and tag Helms Honey to receive a coupon for 50% off your purchase at either Mercantile location or an Etsy order! @ Kingsport, Tennessee

Come see us for a great cause and possibly win some Helms Honey products!!!
07/09/2018

Come see us for a great cause and possibly win some Helms Honey products!!!

Come play some mini golf for a great cause!  July 14 at 5 pm
07/09/2018

Come play some mini golf for a great cause!

July 14 at 5 pm

This July 14th at 5 p.m., come to “Mutt Putt” at the Kingsport Putt-Putt Fun Center to help local shelter dogs put their best paws forward! New local nonprofit Adopt-A-Cut provides free grooming sessions to make shelter dogs more adoptable. 

Happy Independence Day!  Here is an article published in American Bee Journal in 1917.  True or not it makes for an exci...
07/04/2018

Happy Independence Day! Here is an article published in American Bee Journal in 1917. True or not it makes for an exciting story! 🐝🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🎇🎆

circa. 1917 ~ How The Bees Saved America.
Happy Independence Day !
Like: Historical Honeybee Articles - Beekeeping History

Image: Charity throws a stick full force at her pursuers.

How The Bees Saved America

The brave patriots of the American Revolution were having a particularly hard time of it in the summer of 1780. General Washington and his ragged, half-starved soldiers were in camp just outside of Philadelphia, where it was certain that the enemy was getting ready to make an important move. Man after man had risked his life trying to get their secret, but so far no one had been able to give Washington the important news without which he dared not risk his small force in battle.

But the great Washington, himself, scarcely took the independence of the colonists more seriously to heart than did little Mistress Charity Crabtree. Despite her prim Quaker ways, no eyes could spark with greater fire at the mention of freedom than those that smiled so demurely above her white neckerchief and plain gray dress. Charity was a soldier daughter, and though his patriotism made her and her brother John orphans, when the boy also left to fight for his flag, Charity did not shed a tear, but handed him his sword and waved him Godspeed. Though she was all alone now and only twelve years old, the little maid kept a stout heart. "If I hold myself ready to serve my country, I know the time will come," she said, as she walked back from the gate through the fragrant lane, Honeycombed with beehives. "Meanwhile, I must keep my bees in good order."

Charity's father had been a bee farmer, and he kept all these hives at the entrance of his lane, so the bees could search the highway for wild flower sweets. One of his last acts was to send a beautiful comb of their honey to General Washington, whereupon the General had smacked his lips and said: "Those bees must be real patriots. They give the best that is in them to their country."

Charity stopped now to notice how well the bees were swarming. They seemed particularly active this morning, but she was not afraid of these little creatures who do not sting unless they are frightened or attacked. "I shall have a great many pots of honey to sell this fall," she thought. "It is good Providence who inspires the bees to help me keep our little white house all by myself, until brother John returns." Then suddenly the little Quaker maid turned pale. She stopped for a second with her hand to her ear, and then she ran quickly to the highway. These were terrible times, when, at any moment, bullets might whizz about like hailstones, and every good colonist lived tensely, in fear the little American army would be captured and their brave fight for independence lost forever.

It was a man in citizen's dress who galloped down the road. His hat was blown off and he pressed his left hand to his side. When he saw Charity he just was able to rein in his horse and, falling from his saddle, draw her close so she might catch the feeble words he muttered between groans. "You are Patriot Crabtree's daughter?" he murmured, and the girl nodded, as she raised his head on her arm. "I am shot, I am wounded," he gasped. "Leave me here, but fly on my horse yonder to General Washington's camp. Give him this message: 'Durwent says Cornwallis will attack Monday with large army.' Do not fail him!" cried the man. "Be off at once! The enemy is pursuing close."

Poor Charity had just time to repeat the message and assist the fainting man to a grassy place under the elm tree's shade, when the air thundered with a thudding of hoof beats, and before the terrified girl could gain her horse, a dozen soldiers leaped over the garden wall at the back of the house. "For my country!" the plucky maid cried, and leaped to the saddle. But even then she realized that if once the British saw her they could easily remount their own horses, evidently left on the other side of the wall, and so capture her and prevent her from reaching Washington. As it was they discovered the unconscious soldier, whom they quickly surrounded by a guard, then spied the fleeing girl and immediately gave chase. "Ho, there!" they cried. "Stop, girl, or by heaven well make you!" They crowded after her into the mouth of the lane, while Charity cast about hopelessly for some way of escape. Suddenly, with the entrance of the soldiers, the bees began to buzz with a cannon's roar, as if to say, "Here we are, Charity! Didn't Washington say we were patriots, too? Just give us a chance to defend our country!"

Like lightning, now, Charity bent from her saddle, and seizing a stout stick, she wheeled around to the outer side of the hedge that protected the hives like a low wall. Then, with a smart blow, she beat each hive until the bees clouded the air. Realizing from experience that bees always follow the thing that hits them rather than the person who directs it, she threw the stick full force at her pursuers.

As Charity galloped off at high speed she heard the shouts of fury from the soldiers, who fought madly against the bees. And, of course, the harder they fought, the harder they were stung. If they had been armed with swords the brave bees could not have kept the enemy more magnificently at bay.

While Charity was riding furiously miles away, down the pike, past the bridge, over the hill, right into Washington's camp, her would-be pursuers lay limply in the dust—their noses swollen like powder horns. When the little maid finally gained admission to Washington's tent, for to none other would she trust her secret, the great general stared at her gray dress torn to ribbons, her kerchief draggled with mud and her gold hair loosened by the wind. But Charity had no time for ceremony. "I have a message for thee, sir," she said, standing erect as a soldier beside the general's table. "I have ridden these many miles while a dozen of the enemy have been kept at bay so I might bear it." When she gave Washington the message he sprang from his seat and laid his fatherly hand upon her shoulder. "The little Quaker maid has saved us," he said, and his voice rang while he looked deep into her gray eyes, lighted with honest loyalty. "I brought the message only as I was directed, sir," she said. "It was my bees that saved their country."

You can imagine Washington's surprise and that of his officers who crowded in with warm praise for the girl, when Charity told them of the story of the patriotic bees.

Washington laughed. "It is well done, Little Miss Crabtree," he cried, warmly. "Neither you nor your bees shall be forgotten when our country is at peace again. It was the cackling geese that saved Rome, but the bees have saved America."

🐝 Don't forget to like our page.

Source:
American Bee Journal, September 1917 Page 307
https://archive.org/details/americanbeejourn5657hami/page/307/mode/1up

Charity and her bees image::
http://swensonhivesandhoneybees.blogspot.com/

"Tammy Horn, senior researcher apiculturist at Eastern Kentucky University and the author of Bees in America: How the Honey Bee Shaped a Nation, originally unearthed the story from a 1917 issue of American Bee Journal, but scholars haven't yet been able to verify whether or not the event actually took place. Even if it is just a tall tale, it's certainly a remarkable one."
(Plan Bee: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about the Hardest-Working ...By Susan Brackney-2009)

One year ago we had just sold out of our first 100 pounds of honey and our ideas for Helms Honey were exploding to life!...
07/02/2018

One year ago we had just sold out of our first 100 pounds of honey and our ideas for Helms Honey were exploding to life! Thank you to our family and friends and customers we have come to know over the past year. You all make this small business of ours possible! We can’t wait to see what happens in the year to come!

07/01/2018

To celebrate our first year of Helms Honey we are making custom Tees!!!

You can preorder a t-shirt on Etsy today! Message us for details on local pick up options.

https://etsy.me/2tJ2BnP

Each shirt will be hand printed by silkscreen. The shirts are from RECOVER in North Carolina! They make the shirts from recycled plastic! We are so excited to work with an eco friendly supplier! Support local beekeepers and save the honey bees! 🐝

We have a new listing up this morning!!Check out our essential oil bracelets that match your favorite lip balm scents. T...
06/30/2018

We have a new listing up this morning!!

Check out our essential oil bracelets that match your favorite lip balm scents. There are only these 4 in stock so grab them fast!

Use the coupon code: BEEBRACELET for free shipping on your new bracelet today only!

Each bracelet comes with a 1mL bottle of essential oil blend and instructions on how to use your bracelet.

Helms Honey Essential Oil Bracelets bring your favorite lip balm scents into a bracelet you can wear! Each bracelet comes with a 1mL bottle of essential oil blend that you apply to the lava beads on the bracelet. Each bracelet is handmade with stones that correspond with the aromatherapy

06/29/2018

Bee Fact Friday: During the Summer, worker bees only live for 6 weeks. They fly from flower to flower until their wings fall apart.
🐝💪💛🐝

In this video you can see a bee chewing her way out of her cell! Happy birthday little bee!!!

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Church Hill, TN

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