Honey from fields, Petworth, Sussex (August)
- In stock, ready to ship
- Inventory on the way
360 jars from fields on the edge of Petworth — and a honey that feels like late summer in a spoon.
Kaz's bees here are kept by open fields just outside Petworth, within foraging distance of Ebernoe Common and Nature Reserve — one of the most species-rich ancient woodlands in the South East. The landscape couldn't be more different from her Pulborough woodland apiary, and the honey reflects it completely. Where Pulborough gives you butterscotch and coffee, this August harvest opens with tropical fruit and then settles into a deep, warming toffee and caramel finish. Comforting in the best possible way, with a texture that makes it almost impossible to put the spoon down. The kind of extraordinary honey that people who thought they knew what honey tasted like just love discovering.
I visited on a damp November day and even in the grey it was a beautiful spot — the kind of place that makes you understand exactly why the bees do so well there.
Kaz trained as an engineer before beekeeping took over completely — she spent years working with beekeepers across the UK and New Zealand before setting up on her own. She now manages over 50 hives across Sussex, bringing the same precision to her beekeeping that she once brought to engineering. Every apiary is chosen with care, and every honey shows it.
The details
- Limited edition: 1 of 360 jars
- 224g / 8oz
- Kaz's story on the label — name, location, harvest date and number of jars produced
- The perfect "saw this and thought of you" gift for anyone who appreciates something genuinely special
- British-sourced jars and labels
Delivery Free delivery on orders of £25 or more — two jars takes you there. Sent 48-hour tracked with Royal Mail.
Our beekeepers Every beekeeper we work with is someone we've visited — to see the landscape, understand the foraging and discover what makes their honey distinct. All of them are committed to the habitats their bees depend on, working alongside landowners and local farmers to protect and enhance the natural world around their hives.