Julie's Honey

Julie's Honey Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Julie's Honey, Granite City, IL.

We sell chemical free 🐝 raw honey local to St Louis Metro East, the products we make from the beeswax, sundry bee related products, plants🌱, while promoting beekeeping & pollination through public speaking & education.

Downtown Granite, we’re here till two
06/06/2026

Downtown Granite, we’re here till two

06/04/2026

Vendor Spotlight: Come and see KWS Goods, This Saturday June 6th From 10AM - 2 PM

06/03/2026

Vendor Spotlight: Come and see Julie This Saturday June 6th From 10AM - 2 PM

Stop by an check out the new dark honey we have This month😋
05/28/2026

Stop by an check out the new dark honey we have This month😋

There is SO much conversation about wasps, yellow jackets, hornets… and now the “Asian hornets.”Honestly… it can get con...
05/24/2026

There is SO much conversation about wasps, yellow jackets, hornets… and now the “Asian hornets.”

Honestly… it can get confusing VERY quickly.
I see people online calling almost every flying insect a bee, wasp, hornet or “murder hornet.” So let’s break this down in simple terms.

First… “wasp” is actually a very large group of insects.
Think of it like dogs:
dogs are one big group
but under that group you have
-Labs,
-Poodles
-huskies,
-shepherds,
-bulldogs etc.

Same thing with wasps.
Under the wasp category you have:
-yellow jackets
-hornets
-paper wasps
-dirt nest wasps
-giant cicada hunting wasps
tiny pest-control wasps
and MANY more

So technically:
-hornets are wasps
-yellow jackets are wasps
-paper wasps are wasps
…but not all wasps are hornets or yellow jackets.

Honey bees are NOT wasps.
One of the biggest differences between bees and wasps is how they are built.
Honey bees:
-fuzzy looking
-built for pollination
-hairs help trap pollen
-focused on nectar and pollen collection

Wasps:
-smooth shiny bodies
-built more for hunting and scavenging
-many species are predators of other insects

Now let’s break down some of the common ones people see:

Honey Bees
-pollinators
-produce honey and wax
-usually gentle unless defending the hive
-die after stinging mammals
-important for agriculture and food production

Yellow Jackets
-a type of wasp
-very defensive
-LOVE sugary drinks, garbage and BBQ food
-can sting multiple times
-often nest underground or inside walls
These are usually the insects bothering people at picnics in late summer… not honey bees.
They also become more aggressive in late summer and fall as food sources decline and their colonies begin breaking down before winter.

Paper Wasps
-thinner bodies with long legs
-build small umbrella-shaped nests
-generally less aggressive than yellow jackets
-legs hang down during flight

Hornets
-large social wasps
-build paper nests
-predators of other insects
-protective around their nests

And now the two insects people keep confusing online:
1) Asian Giant Hornet
nicknamed the “murder hornet” by the media
-VERY large
-orange/yellow head
-predator of insects including honey bees
-received huge media attention

Asian Hornet (Vespa velutina)
-different species than the Asian Giant Hornet
-darker body with yellow legs
-known for hunting honey bees
-hovers outside hives and attacks returning foragers
-major concern in parts of Europe

One VERY important takeaway…
Not every large flying insect is an “Asian hornet.”
Every single year harmless native insects are wrongly identified online which causes panic and misinformation.
Correct identification matters.
Bee Haven 2026
And believe it or not… wasps and hornets are actually important parts of nature too. Many species help control pest insects and help maintain balance in ecosystems.
That being said… I still do not want yellow jackets flying around my drink.

As bee population collapses, US apiarists fear research cutsby Paul BLAKEedited by Andrew Zinin Editors' notes The GISTA...
05/21/2026

As bee population collapses, US apiarists fear research cuts
by Paul BLAKE

edited by Andrew Zinin
Editors' notes
The GIST
Add as preferred source
US beekeepers lost more than half their bee colonies in the year leading up to April 2025, according to the most recent data.
In a lot behind a disused West Virginia gas station at the foot of the Appalachian Mountains, Roy Funkhouser is surrounded by about a dozen beekeepers and countless buzzing bees.

This club of apiarists—ranging from hobbyists to full-time commercial bee farmers—gathers regularly to learn new skills and discuss tricky problems, not least the parasitic varroa mites that plague their hives.

But the group—and beekeepers across the country—face a new challenge: The government's closure of a key research facility, home to the nation's oldest bee lab that has been at the vanguard of research into bee ills for over a century.

Funkhouser, a veteran commercial beekeeper, should have around 1,200 hives under his care. This year, he's sitting on less than 200.

"It's a real struggle," Funkhouser told AFP. "The parasites that we've got now, the mites and everything—more viruses and more pesticide exposures, more chemical exposures—everything is just more of a struggle today than what it was in the past."

'Varroa destructor' mites, with one seen here as a small brown lump on the rear of a honeybee, are 'the most serious pest of honey bees inflicting more damage and higher economic costs than all other apicultural diseases' according to USDA.
Catastrophic losses

He's hardly alone.

America's beekeepers are in a bad way.

They lost more than half their bee colonies in the year leading up to April 2025, according to the latest estimates from Apiary Inspectors of America, marking the highest annual loss since the group began surveying beekeepers.

Mites & Viruses

"You know, I can sample for a mite count, but I can't sample for mitochondrial DNA," Funkhouser said. "We need the lab for that."

Funkhouser is referring to the aptly named "Varroa Destructor," a 1.5mm crab-looking creature that the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) calls "the most serious pest of honey bees inflicting more damage and higher economic costs than all other apicultural diseases."

The mites now wreak havoc on American bee colonies by feeding on the insects and spreading a wing-deforming virus.

US beekeeper Roy Funkhouser (r) has a fraction of the beehives he should have due to catastrophic losses in recent years, not least by varroa mites.
The mites are also a threat to American crops.

Farmers pay Funkhouser to truck his bees across the country—as far as the almond fields of California—where they spend around two weeks pollinating crops.

"They'll get a percentage of almonds without [my bees] but not nearly the quantity that they're looking for," Funkhouser explained.

Farm science

In his mite battle, Funkhouser has found an ally in Zac Lamas, a researcher at the bee lab within the USDA's Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (BARC).

Lamas's "whole team come down one time, and we sampled everything," Funkhouser said. "They took bees back and growed them in the lab, they cultured all the pollen, the wax, and many, many things."

Lamas and his colleagues then formulate advice to share with beekeepers around the nation.

"It's not that we're working with one beekeeper. We might be working with several million dollars' worth of colonies, or several million dollars' worth of pollination services that won't exist because these colonies are at risk," Lamas told AFP between bare-armed lectures atop the hives.

But researchers like him may soon be out of job, as the USDA looks to save money by shutting BARC, eliminating labs and redistributing others to facilities across the country.

The US Department of Agriculture's Beltsville Agricultural Research Center will close this year, leaving the fate of the nation's oldest bee lab uncertain.
Congressional cuts

A USDA spokesperson told AFP that Congress had reduced agriculture research funding by more than $32 million "in certain areas," forcing the closure of the storied research center, leaving the fate of the nation's oldest bee lab uncertain.

Lamas argues this is short-sighted.

"The lab is 3.2 million (dollars) a year for 20 plus scientists, and all the work we do," he said. "We responded to a $600 million problem… The idea that we're redundant and expensive isn't a good way to generalize the value of this lab or the cost of this lab."

The USDA did not respond directly to AFP's questions about the fate of the bee research or where it might be relocated.

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Institutional knowledge

Amid the uncertainty, Lamas has taken a job with a local university—outside the lab.

But he fears the loss of institutional knowledge when the lab is fragmented.

"You have a dozen service-driven, -minded people, who all they want to do is provide benefits in the form of food security to the American public," he said. "When we have a problem, multiple people with overlapping skills can work on it."

Beekeepers are worried too.

"It's going to be a big loss," Funkhouser said. "We've got results from a lot of our testing and figured out a lot of the things that are going wrong."

"The unfortunate thing is, it seems like when you figure out one thing the next year, it's something else."

Daily science news on research developments, technological breakthroughs and the latest scientific innovations

Looking to check bees Has any of you ever looked in a top bar hive? Now your chance.Hoping for good weather tomorrow.Thu...
05/20/2026

Looking to check bees
Has any of you ever looked in a top bar hive? Now your chance.
Hoping for good weather tomorrow.Thursday
If intreated, give me a holler😃

05/14/2026
Just wanted to remind everyone about our first outdoor meeting of the year.  The meeting will be this Sunday (May 17, 20...
05/13/2026

Just wanted to remind everyone about our first outdoor meeting of the year. The meeting will be this Sunday (May 17, 2026) at 2pm. The meeting will be held at the Granite City Moose Lodge. The address is:

2521 Maryville Rd. Granite City, IL 62040

Discussion Topic will be: "What is honey" and will include a honey extraction demonstration.

We’ll be having pulled barbecue pork sandwiches, potluck from other members is welcome ,you just never know what everybody’s favorite dish is.

Please bring a chair.

For more info on this and all of our club events, please check out the events tab on our website.

Hope to see you there.

05/10/2026

The girls are hard at work!

Address

Granite City, IL
62040

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