Where does dark honey come from?

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aberreef

Field Bee
Joined
Apr 22, 2010
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Location
Mid Glamorgan
Hive Type
National
Number of Hives
5 hives + 3 nucs
As per the title really:rolleyes: I saw some VERY dark honey at the Royal Welsh Show and just wondering what the bees work to produce it. I read some old posts that suggest it's from honeydew, would this be the only source?

Cheers
Huw
 
Hawthorn is also a very dark, thick honey.
 
Honey dew honey is often very dark and very delicious - the best i think
 
Thanks for the replies. I've not seen any dark stores in any of my hives to date so I presume they either have something they prefer on offer or just don't have the correct forrage. Would be a nice treat if some turns up though:sifone:

Last seasons early crop was a mid colour and very 'thick' like golden syrup YUM:drool5: The stuff at the show was almost black:cool:
 
I tried growing this on the field last year. It either didnt germinate or the pigs ate it all lol
Eastern Europeans grow this to excess :) the flavour is very strong hence the demand from the catering trade ,simply because a little goes a long way in confectionery :D
VM
 
Bees working Bell Heather on the Mourne Mountains in Northern Iireland produce a very dark almost black honey and if conditions are right you can have a fantastic yeild
 
i have a hive at the foot of wee binian in the mournes and it has nearly two super filled,the honey has a fantastic smell and is dark but not as dark as i thought it would be.
Darren
 
Bell heather honey is a port wine colour not black
 
The books call it port wine but I have seen it on the show bench at what I would have called a black. If I delve deep enough into my old pics I may even have one of the show.

PH
 
I have judged dozens of shows and my bees have collected bell heather lots of times over the last 40 years (when they collect it from Erica cinerea before the Ling gets going ). Bell heather honey is not black or even blackish.It is darkish with a definite port wine colour in the jar. In the comb the unsealed cells have a deep reddish appearance. Similar honey also from Erica tetralix.
Ling heather honey which is amber (with air bubbles from the pressing process) at first goes quite dark with time (some on the showbench is decades old!)
 

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