We Removed a Beehive and Found Green Honey Inside.
- 2 days ago
- 4 min read
Updated: 3 hours ago

On June 22, 2026, Betsy and I drove out to a Las Vegas home expecting a routine bee removal. The homeowner had honey bees living inside an irrigation valve box in the yard.
What we found inside that box stopped us both cold.
The honey wasn't golden. It wasn't amber. It was vivid, unmistakable green. After hundreds of bee removals across Las Vegas, neither of us had ever seen anything like it.
What We Actually Found
The colony itself looked completely healthy. The bees were active and calm. The brood was normal. The wax comb was unremarkable in every way, except for what was stored inside it.
Only portions of the honey had turned green. Not all of it. Not the wax, not the bees, not the brood. Just some of the stored honey, displaying a color so unusual we initially questioned whether it was actually honey at all.
We considered the possibilities right there at the job site. Chemical contamination? Mold? Something wrong with the colony? But the bees were behaving normally, the comb looked healthy, and the color was confined to the honey alone. Whatever caused this wasn't harming the colony.
Before removing another piece of comb, we grabbed our phones and started documenting everything.
That decision changed what happened next.

The Internet Weighs In
That evening, I posted photos to r/Beekeeping on Reddit, genuinely curious whether any other beekeeper had ever encountered green honey.
The response was immediate and overwhelming. See it Here
Within hours, the post had attracted thousands of views and hundreds of comments. Beekeepers from across the country and internationally began sharing theories. People who had never kept a bee in their lives were following along and asking questions.
The leading theories from the community:
Colored sugar syrup. Bees will readily collect sugar water if it's available nearby, and if that syrup contained food dye, green dye specifically, the stored honey could take on that color. This is the explanation most experienced beekeepers in the thread found most plausible.
Unusual nectar sources. Certain plants produce nectars that can influence honey color, though vivid green is exceptionally rare from natural floral sources alone.
Environmental contamination. Some commenters raised the possibility of irrigation water additives or landscaping chemicals interacting with the stored honey, though this seemed less likely given the colony's apparent health. Antifreeze was even mentioned several times!
No single explanation was confirmed. The thread stayed active for days.

Green Honey Has Happened Before
As unusual as our discovery was, it isn't without precedent.
The most documented case of anomalously colored honey occurred in Ribeauvillé, France, where beekeepers discovered their hives were producing blue and green honey in 2012. The source turned out to be residue from M&M candy shells being processed at a biogas plant several miles away.
Bees had been collecting the sugary waste instead of flower nectar, and the artificial colors passed directly into their honey.
Pink honey has been reported in isolated cases tied to heavily red dyed hummingbird feeder syrup, something that's not uncommon in residential Las Vegas yards.
We can't say with certainty what the source was in our case. The irrigation box location, the residential yard setting, and the fact that only some of the honey was affected are consistent with the bees having access to a colored external sugar source at some point during the colony's establishment.

What Happens to the Bees
The colony was successfully removed and relocated to one of our apiaries, which is how we handle every job. We don't exterminate honey bee colonies. We carefully extract the comb, protect the queen, and move the bees somewhere they can continue doing what they do.
The green honey came with them.
We're monitoring the colony. The bees appear completely healthy. If the color source was a nearby sugar supply, like a feeder, a product, something in the yard, they won't have access to it at the apiary, and any new honey they produce should return to normal color.
Did We Try It?
It's the question everyone keeps asking us.
Honestly, we thought about it. Bright green honey is not something you see every day, and there was a part of us that was genuinely curious what it tasted like.
But we didn't eat it, and the reason is simple. We didn't know what made it green.
If the source was food-grade dye from a hummingbird feeder or colored sugar syrup, the honey was probably fine. But the Reddit thread surfaced something that stuck with us: multiple people raised the possibility of antifreeze. Propylene glycol has a sweet taste, bees will collect it, and it can possibly end up in honey.
We couldn't rule it out.
When the list of possible sources includes antifreeze, the decision gets easy pretty fast. Some mysteries are better left unsolved.
The Strangest Thing We've Ever Pulled Out of the Ground
People ask us regularly what the most unusual removal we've ever done was.
Until this one, we'd tell different stories depending on the day. Rooftop colonies, wall voids packed with years of honeycomb, a hive built inside an outdoor speaker.
Now we have a definitive answer.
It was a Tuesday morning in Las Vegas, an irrigation box, and honey the color of a green traffic light.
We've done this work long enough to know that bee colonies can still surprise us. This one proved it.
Betsy Lewis & Pete Rizzo
🐝 Las Vegas’s All-Natural Live Bee Removal Team
About Us: The Authors

We’re Betsy Lewis and Pete Rizzo - Beekeepers on a Mission in Las Vegas
We’re not just in the bee business, we’re in the bee-saving business.
Trained by a master beekeeper and backed by hundreds of successful removals, we are dedicated to rescuing and relocating honey bees with care and precision.
Every swarm we save and every hive we manage reflects our deep love for the bees.
Why Vegas Bees? Because We Never Stop Learning or Caring
Beekeeping is always evolving, and so are we. We stay on the cutting edge by continuing our education, connecting with fellow beekeepers, and refining our beekeeping practices and techniques to ensure the best outcomes for both bees and people.
Whether it’s advanced bee removal strategies or the latest natural methods, we’re always one step ahead.
We’re also proud to support the beekeeping community with high-quality beekeeping supplies for everyone.
If you’re ready to suit up and start your journey, we’ve got what you need. Wanna become a beekeeper? Read our Beekeeping for Beginners Guide.
