Copper Bee Apiary

A garden apiary in Whittlesford, Cambridge, UK - honey bees and their beekeeper Hilary van der Hoff.

About Copper Bee Apiary

The Beekeeper

The Beekeeper

Copper Bee Apiary is a garden apiary in Whittlesford, Cambridgeshire, UK. The beekeeper is me, Hilary van der Hoff.

Copper Bee Apiary specialises in comb honey, which we have been producing on and off since our first attempt in 2016. We also make mead, honey sloe gin, quince jelly with honey, and beeswax products. These products are currently not for sale, as we only produce them on a small scale.

I keep bees because I enjoy working with and learning about them. Although I love the natural world and support conservation, my beekeeping is not motivated by conservation/environmental concerns, which I believe would be a misguided reason to keep honey bees.

I have been keeping bees since the summer of 2014, when I first established Copper Bee Apiary with a colony of local bees in my back garden in Cambridge city, UK. You can read about the original city apiary here.

People sometimes ask me, how much work is it to keep bees? And I suppose that depends what kind of beekeeper you are. Are you the type to idly wander in to your apiary with a cup of tea on a summer’s afternoon, and find yourself still there after sunset? I am. Others might be able to wander back out again when they’ve finished their tea. I spend huge amounts of time with the bees in the spring and summer, yet fall behind on many things (building frames, cleaning kit, reading the bee books…), and I wish I had even more time available for beekeeping. At times (perhaps, if I’m honest, most of the time), it feels less like “keeping bees” and more like “trying to keep up with bees”. I’m usually a step or two behind them. If I do successfully manage some timely intervention, like a vertical split, then I’m mightily pleased with myself. I don’t want to be the type of beekeeper who’s always opening the hives and “controlling” the bees to some scheduled routine…but it seems I’m not at risk of doing that, anyway. (An extract from one of my adventures…)


Credentials

I am a member of the Cambridgeshire Beekeepers Association (CBKA) and the British Beekeepers Association (BBKA).

On 12 August 2015 I passed the BBKA Basic Assessment with Credit, and was awarded a Certificate of Proficiency in Apiculture.

My intention is to continue my studies in apiculture to ultimately become a Master Beekeeper.

Events Attended

Preparing Bees for Winter, CBKA talk by Jane Medwell, Master Beekeeper, 11 September 2024

CBKA One Day Seminar “Future Challenges”, 23 March 2024, St John’s College, Cambridge. Speakers: Maggie Gill (Regional Bee Inspector, Wales); Giles Budge (Newcastle University); Diane Drinkwater (BBKA chair); Karl Colyer (bee farmer).

My Beekeeping Year, Stewart Spinks, CBKA webinar, 6 December 2023

Is Pollen the Best Food for Bees? CBKA webinar by Geraldine Wright, Hope Professor of Entomology, University of Oxford, 25 January 2023

Stings and Allergies and Anaphylactic Shocks, CBKA webinar by Dr Pamela Ewan, 9 March 2022

Managing your queens, CBKA webinar by Marin Anastasov, 2 March 2022

What happens within the honey bee hive, CBKA webinar by Dr Paul Siefert, 23 February 2022

The Unknown Knowns, CBKA webinar by Prof David Evans, 2 February 2022

My garden of a thousand bees, CBKA webinar by Martin Dohrn, 26 January 2022

A talk on European Foulbrood by Professor Giles Budge, CBKA webinar 10 November 2021

Daniel du Gard, talk on Wild Honey Bees, CBKA webinar 28 July 2021

Alex Sapoznik, “Bees and beeswax - the gold of the medieval world?”, CBKA webinar 27 January 2021.

Mike Palmer, “Sustainable Beekeeping”, CBKA webinar 9 December 2020

Nicola Bradbear, Bees for Development, CBKA webinar 28 October 2020.

Tom Seeley, “The Bee Colony as a Honey Factory”, CBKA webinar 19 August 2020.

Raffaele Dall'Olio, Italian sommelier and honey taster, Bologna, “The Italian Job: An overview of the history and technique of honey sensory analysis”, CBKA webinar 29 July 2020.

Jamie Ellis, University of Florida, “Tasks of Worker Honey Bees”, CBKA webinar July 2020.

Clare Densley and Martin Hann, Buckfast Abbey, “Reading the Colony”, CBKA webinar 8 July 2020.

CBKA One Day Seminar. “Bees, Forage, Pollination and Sustainability.” 7 March 2020. Planting for bee forage, by Norman Carreck; The science of pollination, by Hamish Symington; Investigating the foraging preferences of honeybees using DNA techniques, by Laura Jones; and Sustainable Bees and Queens for Everyone, by Roger Patterson.

Gosnells of London, Mead Brewing Course, 29 February 2020.

“No honey…I’m solitary! An introduction to Red Mason bees and other native solitary bees.” CBKA talk by John Whittles of masonbees.co.uk, 19 January 2020.

Beekeepers’ Question Time - CBKA Q&A with an “expert panel” of Roy Cross, Barny Henderson, Peter Bates and Yours Truly, 1 December 2019.

Derek Mitchell, University of Leeds, ”What is a Warm Nest to a Honeybee?” talk to CBKA 19 September 2019.

Tom Gosnell, “Starting Gosnells Mead Brewery”, talk to CBKA on 18 July 2019, with mead sampling.

Dr Jonas Geldmann, Cambridge University Department of Zoology, talk to CBKA on how managed honeybees are cause problems for wild pollinators, 11 April 2019.

CBKA One Day Seminar, 23 March 2019. “Beekeeping in the 21st Century”. David Evans on DWV - post here.

Jonathan Baynes talk to CBKA on Integrated Pest Management, 7 October 2018

Kath Austin talk to CBKA on Bee Bee Wraps, 19 July 2018

CBKA Practical Apiary Meeting, Wandlebury Apiary, 21 April 2018. "What to do following the first inspection of the hive at the start of the year". Led by Stephen Poyser and Roy Cross.

John Rayner talk to CBKA, 19 April 2018, on Beekeeping in Rural Cambridgeshire.

CBKA One Day Seminar, 10 March 2018. "Is active swarm control still the best policy?"

The Hive at Kew Gardens, December 2017. Post here.

CBKA Practical Apiary Meeting, 19 August 2017. Honey Processing.

CBKA Practical Apiary Meeting, 10 June 2017. Inspections and Apiary Management. Post here.

BBKA Spring Convention, Harper Adams University, Shropshire UK 7-9 April 2017. Annual conference of the British Beekeepers Association. Workshop on pollen in honey. Blog post here.

Old Library Botanical Exhibition at Christ's College Cambridge, March 2017. Blog post here.

John Rayner talk to CBKA, 29 January 2017.

CBKA talk 2 October 2016 on "CBKA Apiaries".

Jonathan Pattrick talks to CBKA on 21 July 2016 on the bee gym (see my post here) and on his PhD work (my post here).

Jonathan Baynes talk to CBKA on 16 June 2016 on the General Certificate in Beekeeping Husbandry Assessment.

CBKA One Day Seminar, 12 March 2016. "“Beekeeping – a self-financing hobby?"

"Making Mead", by Brian Dennis, CBKA 4 October 2015.

Skep making, CBKA 2015

CBKA One Day Seminar 2015 "My type of hive is the best".

CBKA Improvers' Course 2015

BIBBA/SICAMM Conference, Llangollen UK 26-28 September 2014. A joint conference of the Bee Improvement and Bee Breeders Association and the Societas Internationalis pro Conservatione Apis melliferae melliferae. Blog post here.


Writings, images and sound recordings are by the beekeeper unless otherwise indicated. All rights reserved.

Logo artwork © 2015-2020 Susan Harnicar Jackson. All rights reserved.