One Hive. One Harvest. One Chance.
The single most exclusive honey on Earth.
Extracted from our solitary colony in England’s ancient National Forest.
Our master beekeeper performs one extraction annually. Whatever the colony yields becomes the entire collection for that season. No blending. No reserves. No second harvest. This is all there is.
A Single Harvest. A Complete Year.
Once each year, and only once, our illustrious beekeeper performs the single harvest from the hive.
He takes only what the colony can spare after securing their own winter stores. The bees decide the quantity.
Whatever they give, whether twenty seven jars or ten, this becomes the entire offering of One Hive Only for the next twelve months.
There is nothing left over. There is nothing added from anywhere else.
This is the complete seasonal yield of one hive, captured in crystal and offered to those who understand that true rarity is finite by nature.
One Hive. One Place. One Extraction.
In the protected heart of the National Forest, a solitary colony thrives under quiet guardianship.
Deep within an ancient glade that has remained untouched for centuries, a single hive was established and continues to flourish. The bees draw nectar from wildflowers and oaks that exist nowhere else in quite this combination.
Master Thornfield visits daily throughout the year, observing, protecting, and leaving the greater share of their labour untouched. Then, once each year, he performs the single harvest — the only time honey is taken. Whatever the hive produces in that moment is all that will ever exist under the name One Hive Only for that season.
There is no other source. There never will be.
The 2025 Harvest.
The complete yield of one hive, one year, one moment.
In late summer 2025, the single annual harvest was performed. The net yield from the hive was 3 pounds of pure, raw, unblended honey. Everything the colony chose to give after securing their own stores. This became the entire collection for the year: 3 jars of 250 g.
Each jar is individually numbered, hand-filled, wax-sealed, and paired with its own museum-grade certificate containing the beekeeper’s personal note, a pressed wildflower from the forrest floor, and full environmental data.
What remains is all that will ever exist from the 2026 harvest. As we started late into the year it was of most importance for our bees to have enough stores to survive the winter.
Tasting Notes
Wild heather, ancient oak pollen, faint smoke of the forest floor, long blackberry bramble finish. Crystalline and exceptionally clear.
Visual
Single 250 g jar resting on moss and oak leaves. Serial number clearly visible on the base: “Jar 004 of 023, 2026”. Beside it, a pressed wildflower and the corner of its cotton certificate.