New cafe where customers can buy bees and honey

Ross Crane
BBC News, Bristol
Lorenzo Bishop
BBC News, West of England
BBC Exterior of the Beekeepers Cafe in Redhill, Bristol. Owner Rod Jenkins visible through open front doors. BBC
The cafe provides a range of equipment to help people get started with Beekeeping

A new cafe where customers can order bees or locally produced honey has opened.

As well as coffee and cake, the Beekeepers Cafe in Redhill, Somerset, is selling all the equipment budding apiarists will need to manage their own hives - including the insects.

The cafe is part of West Country Meadery, which has been producing honey for eight years. Bosses hope the venture will provide a "really good" launchpad to those hoping to try their hand at keeping bees.

Owner Rod Jenkins said: "It's important to keep bees, especially for the environment, but it's also important that people do it properly. We don't want to spread diseases, so we teach people how to look after them properly."

West Country Meadery is the brainchild of husband and wife duo Rod and Tracey Jenkins.

They started their journey when Rod bought Tracey her first hive for Christmas in 2017.

She said the hobby "got a bit out of hand" and they now manage six apiaries across farmers fields, orchards and their own land.

As well as their own produce, the café sells books on beekeeping, suits and gloves.

Some of the products on offer in a display cabinet at the Beekeepers Café in Redhill, Bristol
Visitors can also get hands-on with Beekeeping experiences

Rod and Tracey also want to give aspiring keepers the chance to get "hands-on" by offering experience vouchers.

Between May and August, people can visit the café, get suited up and head to an apiary to lend a hand with inspections and 'hive smoking,' a practice used to keep bees calm.

The cafe will then offer visitors the chance to buy their own bees and hive.

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