Blenheim Palace is Buzzing After the Launch of the Rowse Honey Bee Hive

Blenheim Palace is Buzzing After the Launch of the Rowse Honey Bee Hive

There’s a real buzz at Blenheim Palace this half-term, with the opening of the Rowse Honey Bee Hive in the Walled Garden, a new interactive space where families can learn all about the importance of bees and other pollinators.

Opened this week, the Rowse Bee Hive is the latest part of an ongoing conservation project between Blenheim Palace and Rowse Honey, which includes planting wildflowers across the Blenheim Estate and Palace Gardens to help attract more pollinators and wildlife.

Admission to the Rowse Honey Bee Hive is included in the Blenheim Palace ticket, including an Annual Pass or a Privilege Pass.

The Rowse Bee Hive has been specifically designed to be interactive, allowing families to learn more about bees, hedgerows, and how they can plant the best varieties of pollinators in their own gardens.

Two photographs showing inside the bee hive

Inside the Bee Hive, children can sit at a special workbench made from Blenheim oaks, where they can create their own little bees and fill in special colouring sheets. They can also climb the steps to look out to see if they can see any pollinators going about their work in the Palace’s Potager Garden.

Roy Cox, Managing Director of Blenheim Estate, commented, “The Bee Hive is the latest stage in our ongoing partnership with Rowse Honey, which aims to enhance and expand habitats for pollinators across the Estate, creating a natural environment where wildlife can not only survive but thrive.

“In the UNESCO World Heritage Site, we are fortunate to care for part of Oxfordshire which has remained relatively untouched for centuries. This makes it a haven for native pollinator species, which can forage on the Estate’s extensive natural flora and wildflowers.”

Libby Nicholson, the Brand Manager at Rowse Honey, added, “Bees are a vital part of our natural ecosystem, pollinating around three-quarters of the food crops we eat, including many types of fruit, vegetables and seeds. However, the sad truth is that many pollinator species are in decline here in the UK, which means we need to act now.

“Together with Blenheim, we’re working to inspire kids and grown-ups to join us on our mission to protect bees and other pollinating insects for future generations. Our Rowse Bee Hive provides a fun and interactive space for visitors to learn about the important work carried out by these amazing creatures. Across the wider Blenheim Estate, there are also opportunities to discover the impact our Hives for Lives partnership is having on the local area, including 27 new log hives and over 50 acres of nectar-rich wildflowers for the bees to enjoy.”

Visitors can enjoy all of this and the myriad other transformational changes taking place in the gardens at the UNESCO World Heritage Site – with an Annual Pass allowing them to track the project across the seasons.

One of the displays at the bee hiveBlenheim Palace is Buzzing After the Launch of the Rowse Honey Bee Hive 2

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