Iâve never been to Wisconsin. And Iâve never harvested honey from wild bees. But I have read Little House in the Big Woods, the first of nine books in the Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder.
The series was written in 1932 about life in the late 1800s, and like many great books, it was later turned into a television show. I remember my grandmother loving that showâabsolutely no talking while it was on. What I canât remember is which came firstâŠme reading every book in the series, or watching it with my nana.
These days, I keep in touch with my nieces in California through our reading lists on Goodreads. When I saw Little House in the Big Woods pop up on one of their lists, it stirred up one of my very first memories of bees.
The Honey Tree
Itâs been a long time since I read those booksâbut I read them more than once. And itâs funnyâŠbecause in my memory, I wasnât fascinated by the bees the way you might expect.
I was scared.
Pa cut down an old tree and was suddenly surrounded by bees. In true Pa fashion, he told the girls he worked quickly and didnât get stung. But my imagination didnât see it that way. I could hear the buzzing. I could feel the chaos. Those bees were angry, and I was right there with him.
(If Iâm being honest, my very first âbee memoryâ probably goes back even furtherâto Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree. Who remembers Pooh disguising himself as a little black rain cloud to steal honey? Grown-up me is laughing just thinking about it. Classic Pooh Bear.)
Looking back now, through my beekeeperâs eyes, I have to smile.
Because I cannot imagine putting on a pair of overalls, chopping down a tree, reaching in with my bare hands, and walking away with buckets of honey. I just canât.
Looking Back with Beekeeper Eyes
In reality, wild (feral) honey bees often make their homes inside hollow trees. Itâs not unusual for an arborist to cut into a fallen log and discover a colony living quietly inside. Iâve even been called to one myselfâafter a tree was taken down, the bees followed their queen and clustered on the side mirror of the tree truck. It was one of those moments you donât forget.


Bees are actually quite gentle. Unlike their cousins, the yellow jackets, they donât go looking for trouble. But if you cut into their homeâbreak apart their hive and take their honeyâwellâŠa few stings would be understandable.
The truth is, there is a way to harvest honey calmly.
A little smoke, gently used, masks the scent of the queen. The bees become momentarily disoriented, focused on her, and the whole hive softens. Thatâs when I can move slowly, carefully, and take only what they can spareâwithout destroying their home.
No axes. No disguises. No running.
Just a different kind of understanding.
And thatâs what I appreciate most, looking back at those stories.
They didnât pretend bees were pets.
They didnât make them soft and cartoonish (those are bumblebees).
And they didnât make them talk.
They showed them as something a little wild. A little unpredictable. Part of the natural world.
And they are.
Bees are real.
They are part of the land.
And they deserve our respect.
The Bee Books
Not every âbee bookâ is about the bees. I remember reading The Bee Sting when it made the New York Times listâit stayed with me for different reasons entirely.
â Part of the Bee Books collection



