Beehive to Table: Hands-On Honey Harvest Experience
Duration:
Operated By:
This experience is designed as a shared, small-group immersion rather than a conventional tour. It begins with a guided introduction to the working apiary that sets a common rhythm for the group. Guests learn how a colony functions, the relationship between queen and workers, and how beekeeping follows the seasons rather than controlling them. After being fitted with a beekeeper’s veil, the group is led to the hives for a close, calm encounter where observation is collective and unhurried. Attention is drawn to sound, movement, and scent before guests regroup for a curated honey tasting. Different floral expressions are explored together, linking flavour to landscape, season, and weather, followed by a relaxed morning tea on the terrace overlooking the lake.
From here, the visit shifts from learning to participation. The pace slows and the group is invited into a simple, ancient act carried out together. A freshly removed frame of honey, still warm from the hive, is brought to the table and becomes the focus of shared attention and conversation. Using a solid silver spoon, guests collectively break down the comb and then take turns turning the handle of a traditional honey press, watching raw honey slowly flow directly into jars. There is no filtering, blending, heating, or intervention of any kind. Each participant leaves with a small jar of the honey they helped harvest and a piece of beeswax, a physical reminder of having taken part in a rare, tactile moment grounded in place, season, and connection.
At Bowral Honey Farm, every visit and experience includes a short moment of mindfulness among the bees. Tapping into a long tradition of api‑therapy, one aspect that we explore is simply being immersed in the sounds, scents, and gentle energy of a working apiary as the bees go about their lives.
During each workshop and tour, guests are invited to place a hand on the back of a hive and quietly imagine the 50,000 workers within; moving, communicating, and organising themselves through vibration, scent and sound. We then pause for a brief breathing exercise, closing our eyes and tuning in to the low hum around us. With ten hives arranged in a circle, guests stand at the focal point of the combined life force of more than half a million bees.
This simple meditation offers a powerful way to slow down, to connect with the natural rhythms of the seasons, and to experience the presence of these remarkable pollinators in a deeper, more reflective way.
The system will send you all the details, but the workshop is at my apiary in Bowral.
The address is 1325 Old South Road Bowral NSW 2576. We’re on the grounds of Retford Park, a National Trust property.
Enter through white main gates on Old South Rd and continue until you see our signs and hives (it’s a LONG driveway!). Park in the gravelled area as directed by signage.
This is an outdoors activity, remember to wear appropriate clothing, sun protection etc.
I have hives undercover so we will be able to proceed despite any poor weather.
If you have any questions feel free to call me on 0428294569 or email hamish@bowralhoneyfarm.com












