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Raw Wildflower Honey

Raw Wildflower Honey

$12.95Price
Size
Half Pound
One Pound
Quantity

Colorado River Valley raw wildflower honey harvested from desert blooms including mesquite, rabbitbrush, desert sage, and palo verde. Light floral body with grounded mineral character and a sharper finish than clover honey.


Most commercial honey is overheated, heavily filtered, or blended from unknown sources — removing pollen, flattening flavor, and obscuring origin.


The Get Me Hive Raw Wildflower Honey is minimally handled, never pasteurized, gravity strained instead of ultrafiltered, and lot-tracked back to its harvest period and source apiary.


Harvested from seasonal nectar flows across the Colorado River Valley of Nevada and Arizona, each batch reflects real floral variation, regional forage, and the natural character of raw honey.


Flavor Profile

  • Light amber with a warm honey-gold tone and natural seasonal variation.

  • Less sugary than traditional clover honey, with lightly herbal and slightly mineral characteristics influenced by Southwest desert and river valley forage.

  • Noticeable in tea while remaining balanced enough for everyday use.


From hive to jar, each batch is handled with minimal intervention to preserve the character of the harvest and the natural variation of the season.

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    Wildflowers across the Colorado River Valley bloom at different times throughout the season, depending on rainfall, temperature, and elevation. This diversity provides honey bees with a wide range of nectar sources. The result is a complex and ever-changing honey flavor that reflects the natural beauty of the desert landscape.

    Palo Verde trees bloom in the Southwest during warm seasons and provide an important nectar source for honey bees. Their nectar helps create lighter floral notes and a cleaner finish in raw wildflower honey.

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    Mesquite trees bloom in the Southwest desert and are one of the most important nectar sources for honey bees. Their nectar helps create the warm, earthy flavor and subtle mineral character douns in raw wildflower honey.

    Creosote bushes thrive in desert environmnets and are an important nectar source for honey bees in arid region. Their nectar contributes subtle herbal notes and mineral depth influenced by rainfall and desert conditions.

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    Thistle plants bloom in the Southwest during summer months and provide an important nectar source for honey bees. Their nectar adds mild herbal note and complexity to raw wildflower honey when blooms overlap with other nectar sources.

    Desert verbena blooms in the Southwest and adds bright floral variation to the nectar available for honey bees. Its nectar profile can shift with rainfall and bloom timing, contributing to the unique character of raw wildflower honey.

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    Why Choose Raw Honey from The Get Me Hive?

    Many commercial honeys are processed for uniform appearance and shelf clarity. Our honey is:

     

    • Minimally handled and never ultrafiltered

    • Lot-tracked by harvest period and source apiary

    • Harvested during natural Southwest nectar flows

    • Colony-first harvesting practices

    • Real seasonal variation from batch to batch

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    Traceability & Sourcing

    Each batch is assigned a lot number that identifies the source apiary and harvest period. The Get Me Hive sources from apiaries that measure moisture, pollen composition, and screen for adulteration at the production level. Lot numbers on the jar allow us to trace any batch back to its origin apiary and harvest date.

    What our sourcing data typically looks like:

    • Moisture: 16.5–17.8%

    • Pollen: Present — multi-floral, unfiltered, origin-specific

    • Adulteration screening: Conducted at the apiary level; no syrup blending

    Why this matters: honey above 18.5% moisture risks fermenting in the jar. Ultrafiltered honey contains no pollen, making geographic origin unverifiable. These are the two most common issues in commodity honey.

    Ready to Experience the Current Harvest?
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