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Our Story: The Taste of the Untouched Wilderness
Commercial honey is predictable. It comes from farmed bees fed on single-crop fields, resulting in a light, flat, and overly sweet syrup.
This honey is entirely different — wild, complex, and impossible to replicate. Deep inside untouched Indian forests, far from pesticide fields and city air, wild bees gather nectar from hundreds of medicinal wildflowers, ancient trees, and herbs that no farm can cultivate. We partner with traditional forest gatherers who harvest it using age-old methods — smoke to calm the bees, only the surplus taken, the hive left whole so the colony survives.We partner with traditional, sustainable forest gatherers who ethically harvest this honey without destroying the hives.
Because it is a "multiflora" honey, no two batches are exactly alike. It boasts a deep, dark amber color and a rich, robust, woody flavor that changes slightly with the seasons. We bottle it raw, unheated, and unfiltered, ensuring every drop retains the diverse pollen, propolis, and powerful living enzymes that nature intended.

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Frequently Asked Questions:
Regular honey usually comes from farmed bees that collect nectar from one specific crop (like mustard or clover). Wild Forest Honey is collected by wild bees from hundreds of different trees and medicinal flowers deep in the forest, giving it a darker color, thicker texture, and a much more complex, woody flavor.
Because it is a truly natural product! The wild bees feed on whatever flowers are blooming in the forest during that specific season. We do not blend or artificially standardize our honey, so every batch is a unique reflection of nature.
Many people use raw, multiflora honey specifically to help with seasonal allergies. Consuming small amounts of local, diverse pollen in the honey can act like a natural desensitizer. However, if you have severe bee or pollen allergies, consult your doctor first.
Yes. We work with trained, sustainable gatherers who use smoke to gently calm the bees and only take the excess honey, leaving the core hive intact so the colony can continue to thrive.







