There’s no better way to introduce kids to the importance of honeybees (FYI: those little buggers pollinate around 80 percent of food crops so that we can…well…eat!) than to take a day trip to a bee farm. Bug enthusiasts can check out active hives and get some one-on-one time with a real life beekeeper. Fly by one of these cool local farms that offer tours, talks, and educational programs that will keep your busy bee buzzing with excitement days after.

Rock Hill Honey Bee Farm
This 5-acre bee yard is located just 40 miles southeast of D.C., and offers everything the amateur and professional beekeeper needs to start a backyard apiary. If that’s a little too intense for you, they also offer super-interesting talks and family programs. But the best part? You can purchase yummy, pure raw honey from their 150+ hives, including clover and wildflower varieties. That might be just what the doctor ordered for your springtime allergies.

45 Pinto Ln. (Stafford, Va)
703-595-1179

Ticonderoga Farm
This expansive and full-service farm is located just outside of the District and features festivals and activities designed to give you a fun farm experience full of recreation and learning. They offer seasonal celebrations, garden picking, community garden spots, a farmers market with live bamboo, fig groves, and a gorgeous botanical garden scheduled to open in 2015. And, yes, they have bees. Call the farm to schedule an educational bee talk and demonstration for you and your kids. Sounds like the makings of a memorable birthday party (hint, hint).

26469 Ticonderoga Rd. (Chantilly, Va)
703-327-4424
Online: http://www.ticonderoga.com/

Virginia Beekeeping Supply and Andralyn Farm
Less than two hours from D.C. in Virginia’s Fauquier country, Andralyn Farm specializes in beekeeping and harvesting pure, local wildflower honey. They also love what they do and love to teach it. They offer a range of popular and inexpensive classes on everything beginner wannabe beekeepers need to know.

101 W. Marshall St. (Remington, Va)
540-905-5563

DC Beekeepers
Who says you have to live on a farm to be a beekeeper? The DC Beekeepers is an alliance of urban beekeepers that live and operate in the District. It is at the center of a lively community of beekeeping organizations—including clubs, businesses, government labs and university researchers—throughout the Mid-Atlantic region whose primary mission is to educate the public about the importance of bees.   Their beekeepers offer educational courses and give talks to clubs, schools, community garden groups, churches and environmental organizations. Your scout troop needs to earn a nature badge? Check this group out!

Online: dcbeekeepers.org

The Little Bee Farm
This first generation beekeeping family started keeping bees as a hobby in 2006, but it quickly turned into a passion and then into a business. Their fascination with managing hives and studying bee behavior keeps them growing bigger every year. Currently, The Little Bee Farm has 20 bee colonies. They welcome visits from local schools and children. Contact them directly to schedule a day and time.

Damascus, Md
Online: http://thelittlebeefarm.com/home

Boyle Bee Farm
David and Gwen Boyle know a thing or two about bees and lucky for us they are willing to share. Their bee farm currently has 100 working beehives. In addition to providing pollination for fruits and vegetables to area farmers and selling their raw honey at local markets and produce stands, this beekeeping couple enjoy doing educational shows for children at local fairs. Their show features a two-frame observation beehive so kids and adults can learn about the many different duties of a honeybee. It’s the closest you’ll get to a bee without getting stung. Whew!

471 Owens Rd. (Queen Anne, Md)
410-758-6864
Online: http://www.boylebeefarm.com

Have you ever hung out at a bee farm? Tell us about your experience in the comments section below.

—Jamy Bond

Photos courtesy of vastateparksstaff via Creative Commons, Mats Hagwall via Creative Commons, julochka via Creative Commons

Your kids know that Old MacDonald had one, but what else do they truly know about farms? To celebrate the impending spring (most of the below farms open March 1), wrangle your herd to one of these Los Angeles-area farms to teach the little chickadees what the eee-iii-ooo-ing is all about! Whether they want to get up close and personal with a pig or pick their own fruits and vegetables straight from the crops, kids will learn plenty about where their meals come from, and they may just decide to feast on foods they have previously turned up their noses at. Next time your little rooster crows at the crack of dawn, make hay while the sun shines and head for these fields.

Underwood Family Farms
Enjoy an educational tour with your kids at the Moorpark location of Underwood Family Farms, which officially opens for the season on March 1, 2012. Tour topics include strawberries, pumpkins, animals and vegetables, and a vintage tractor-drawn wagon ride is part of the farm experience. (Group tours are based on 20 participants, so rally your neighbors and friends and make this a grand summer outing!) Farm camp sessions are also offered through mid-August for children ages kindergarten to fourth grade. If you’re flying solo with the kids and not taking a tour, you can experience the fruits of the farm by picking produce and visiting the farm animal center to take a pony ride and view farm animals including cows, pigs, horses, rabbits, ducks, and more. And don’t miss the 30 minute Animal Show exhibiting farm residents from Buttercup the calf to Dora the rat.  

Forneris Farms
20 minutes north of Los Angeles, Forneris Farms is a quick jaunt from the city to the country. There are no animals at this farm, but a visit here from April to December will teach kids what a working farm looks like in terms of yielding plentiful crops. You may purchase a succulent array of seasonal produce in their open air farm market, which includes corn, tomatoes, strawberries, green beans, zucchini, watermelon, cantaloupe and much more. Be sure to visit the Forneris Farms Harvest Festival October 1-31 to go on a wild adventure through their four acre corn maze, weaving your way through 10 foot tall crops! The whole family may also enjoy a tractor pull train ride and grab a great pumpkin to carve.

Animal Acres
Animal loving children will delight in a visit to the Animal Acres farm sanctuary, which focuses on compassionately rescuing and protecting farm animals. Every Sunday at 11:00 am and 1:00 pm, tours are offered wherein kids may “cuddle cows” and “talk to turkeys.” Tours cost $5, and kids 3 and under are free. Bonus: Beginning Sunday, March 4, 2012, the farm will be offering an additional guided tour beginning at 3:00 pm.

McGrath Family Farm
This organic farm has been in business for five generations. Located in Oxnard, 55 miles north of Los Angeles, and a great pitstop on the way to exploring Santa Barbara, the McGrath Family farm features a farm center where kids may feed and handle farm animals, and pick strawberries, vegetables and flowers. The farm offers tours for any age group (be sure to check their website for pricing and tour times), and officially opens for the 2012 season on March 1.

Big John’s Cherries
Cherry lovers take note! Plan ahead this season for a trip to Big John’s Cherries for some cherry picking’ from late May through early July. If you’re itching for a trip to Big John’s Cherries prior to late May (we think kicking off Memorial Day weekend with some cherry picking is a great idea) then you might want to check out the farm in late March for their lilac and lavender season.

We know the Los Angeles are is chock full of family-friendly farms. With Spring fast approaching, let us know in the comment section below where your family goes to get your farm fix.

— Beth Shea