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Alpharetta Bee Company makes sweet deals
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Deborah Eves and Michael Buchanan bonded over a shared love of nature, but their passion for beekeeping and business started when they founded the Alpharetta Bee Company in 2021.
Buchanan and Eves started their backyard venture after a year of learning the ropes of beekeeping, and it first launched as The Sunny Honey Company.
“We started Sunny Honey Company, and we got into the Alpharetta Farmers Market, and we’re like wow, it was amazing how much people love honey,” Eves said. “Then the next year, which was last year before the farmers market started, we said, ‘Well, gosh, nobody realizes that we’re actually local Alpharetta beekeepers,’ so we changed our name to Alpharetta Bee Company.”
Eves and Buchanan feed, house and care for their Italian and Carniolan bees in their backyards on Pebble Trail. They also have hives at Buchanan’s cabin in Cleveland, where they produce their sourwood and mountain wildflower honey.
Buchanan said they learned best practices from a friend in Milton and from a neighbor in Cleveland with 35 years of beekeeping experience. The pair studied YouTube videos and purchased equipment in 2020, and the following year, they were ready to launch.
“It’s not something you can kind of stick your toe in the water about,” Buchanan said. “You’re either in it or you’re not.”
The process Buchanan said much of the process is common sense, but it is also hard work. He said it is important to feed the bees and keep them healthy for the period that they have no nectar, which is 60-70 percent of the year.
The two expect to have 12 or 13 hives in 2023, and Buchanan said one good hive can produce up to 70 pounds of honey.
“They’ve been around since the time of the dinosaurs, so they know what to do,” Buchanan said.
When the honey is ready to be harvested, Eves and Buchanan filter it from their extractor into containers. The honey is raw and never heated or pasteurized, they said, and nothing is added.
Eves also uses the beeswax from their hives in candles and lotion, which is made with coconut oil and shea butter.
Working as a duo, Eves said, allows them to bounce ideas off one
See BEE, Page 9