"The more woody the plant, the darker the honey"

Beekeeping & Apiculture Forum

Help Support Beekeeping & Apiculture Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Although the plant itself has an effect on the colour of honey the trace metals in the soil also have an effect on it too.
 
Although the plant itself has an effect on the colour of honey the trace metals in the soil also have an effect on it too.
You could well have a point there.

In very dry conditions, especially in our Aberdeenshire sites, the bell heather yields a far paler honey than the text books say, and in extreme cases is merely straw coloured. When the rain comes it reverts to the classic colour almost overnight, as if the wet leaches things out of the soil/peat.

Can be straw coloured but with all the normal smell and taste of bell. Would be kicked out by a honey judge lol...but it IS the real thing. Can only be something freed up by water that makes the classic colour.

Oddly enough, in our Angus locations this does not happen...its always the classic colour, but also the area is rarely as dry as Deeside can get.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top