Beekeeping on Nantucket
Featured Entrepreneur Nantucket Style

Bee Thankful for Local Beekeepers

by Cara Godlesky

Beekeeping on Nantucket The average backyard beekeeper in Massachusetts reported an average of about 44% loss in their operations this winter, according to Bee Informed, a partner of the U.S Department of Agriculture. The winter months are harder on the insects, but the population of bees is seeing a decrease throughout the world.

What would you do if you no longer had access to your favorite fruits, vegetables, and nuts? We are thankful to get most of our produce because of the bee population. Without them, agriculture throughout the world would suffer. Apples, almonds, and avocados are just three popular foods that would disappear without bees and their pollination.

The loss in the bee population is making the role of beekeeping increasingly important. These backyard beekeepers, who manage 50 or fewer colonies, will aid in the comeback of the bee population. On Nantucket, we are blessed to have abundant food sources for the bees, such as the cranberry bogs, which can allow the insects to thrive.

Beekeeping on Nantucket Because of our healthy environment, there are many backyard beekeepers on the island. Among them is David Hitchcock, the owner and creator of Bee Happy Honey Company. Hitchcock has been a practicing apiarist since 1990. He recalls being in fifth grade when his interest in bees first was sparked. His grade school teacher brought into class a bumblebee on a leash made with a piece of fishing line. He was taken back by the whole experience. Many years later, when a Sears, Roebuck, and Co. catalog appeared in the mail with the centerfold of a beekeeping outfit, Hitchcock’s interest in bees grew even further. He sent away for the outfit and started building parts for his hives. By the time the bees arrived in the mail, he was ready to start his role in apiculture. Hitchcock, who is a cabinetmaker and restores historical homes on Nantucket, is a beekeeper by hobby rather than profession.

“When I started beekeeping, it wasn’t too enticing because honey was only $1.50 a pound,” said Hitchcock. “You’d have to find other ways to make money or keep lots and lots bees.”

Now Hitchcock sells honey, bottled in the first American one pound honey bottle designed by Henry Muth in 1850, for $20 a pound. Honey from local sources has become more widely desired in recent years due to increasing support from communities and attention in the media surrounding the bee loss epidemic.

Over the course of the season, Hitchcock will harvest about 3,000 pounds of honey. He has about three million bees in his colonies, which are located on Windswept Cranberry Bogs and also at another location a mile and a half from Bartlett’s Farm. Hitchcock’s honey is unfiltered, unpasteurized, and pure.

Beekeeping on Nantucket “My honey isn’t cheap but I’m proud of that too,” said Hitchcock. “If you knew the tremendous effort it took to produce a pound of honey, you’d be happy to pay $20 for it.”

Any large-scale honey producer or packer will get their honey from many different sources, and sometimes from sources outside of the US. The only way to be certain you are purchasing local honey is to buy if from a local beekeeper. Hitchcock not only uses the honey the bees produce, but the wax as well. He takes the beeswax and creates candles. He got into candle making because one day his daughter asked if they could do it together. He had no knowledge about it, but jumped on the opportunity to start something new. “I have the type of personality that I don’t say no to things. You might miss out on something fun,” said Hitchcock.

Beeswax is a much better product for candles than paraffin wax.

Beeswax burns longer and cleaner than candles made from other types of waxes. Hitchcock’s candles burn for up to six or thirteen hours, depending on their size.

In Europe during the 1400s, beeswax was such an important commodity that it was accepted as legal tender and could be used to pay taxes and rent. Only royalty, the wealthy, and the church were allowed to burn beeswax during that time. Today, beeswax candles are still valuable and can be pricey because of their efficiency and because there are very few naturally occurring sources of wax for candles besides from bees.

Beekeeping on Nantucket Hitchcock built his own candle-dipping carousel that can make 336 candles in one session. He strings the wicks through the candle molds, dips them, removes the wax from the carousel’s frames and packages the finished products all himself. Dipping the candles takes only 30 minutes, but the from start to finish, the entire process will take Hitchcock at least 10 hours.

Beekeeping on Nantucket Hitchcock’s dedication to his bees and candle making is admirable. He genuinely enjoys the insects and sometimes he will sit outside and just watch the bees busily flying in and out of the hive. When he sees a bee in the wild, Hitchcock will put it in his hand and say “hello” and see if the bee will crawl up his finger. You can hear the passion he has about his beekeeping when he speaks about it.

“[Apiculture is] fascinating and intriguing. It’s easy to do. In fact I chuckle over the number of people into beekeeping. You show someone a few fascinating points and they learn on their own and it cascades from there,” said Hitchcock. “It’s hard not to do it.”

Hitchcock says that one day he will give up his beekeeping and wishes to spend more time on the ocean and sailing instead. He hopes one day to pass on his hives to another aspiring apiarist.

“If some young person were to come along and really be enthused by it, I’d be happy to turn it over to them,” said Hitchcock.

Hitchcock wants to people to know that bees are nothing to be afraid of. However, the collapse of the bee colonies is something to fear. Bees are essential for pollination. Without them, our food sources would diminish. If you are wondering what you can do to support the bees, avoid spraying or killing hives or bees on your property, buy local honey, and vote to keep neighborhood beekeeping alive in your local town.

“I always felt as though since we got all this press [about bee colony collapse], people are nice to beekeepers. They are buying my products and appreciative and respect the honeybee,” said Hitchcock. “I find it really special.

Beekeeping on Nantucket It makes my heart soar to know this and it’s really cool, really cool.” Hitchcock sells his product, Bee Happy Honey Co., at Bartlett’s Farm, Petticoat Row Bakery, and from his website at beehappynantucket.weebly.com.

All photos courtesy of Terry Pommett.

Articles by Date from 2012