
S3 Ep 7: Windy chat under Lime Trees. Honey galore.
Quick chat after taking two more supers of honey. Hot work but ploughing through the season. Probably back for more next week!

Hosted by D. Briggs. · 🇺🇸 US · EN-GB · 41 episodes
Established thought leaders with verified media credentials.
I am a hobby beekeeper with a couple of hives in Hertfordshire, UK. A lovely couple let my wife and I place our hives in some farmland beside their house. This is a short, gentle, podcast check in from beside my hives. Follow along with our beekeeping season as it happens.
D. Briggs. hosts A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast, a education show with 41 episodes published.

Quick chat after taking two more supers of honey. Hot work but ploughing through the season. Probably back for more next week!

Back from a short break in Scotland. Pulled about 35 pounds of honey from hive 1, the new Queens are going well. All in all, good progress.

Back for another visit. Introduced a new Queen after upgrading the Nuc into a full hive. Assessed the state of readiness of nectar that has been stored so far, which is not quite ready. I was trying to name Gwenyn Gruffy

A check through the Nuc with the old Queen in residence and extra supers for the huge colony. Spring bird song, tales of my visit to hear Nightingales.

Queen Cells everywhere Captain. What to do!

First inspection of the new bees. Transferred the bees to a Poly Hive, marked the Queen and made a Nuc as they had started making queen cells. In with a bang!

We are back in business. I have been lucky enough to be given some bees by my association, as a member has given up. I am feeding fondant to get them through the last of winter and can't wait to open up and see what is g

Sad news I am afraid. I went to visit the bees over Christmas to check on food levels and hive health, but sadly the colony had collapsed. I describe what I think has happened in this episode. There are signs of spring i

Welcome back, I had a few fun edits to start the podcast but have managed to hide them on the cutting room floor somehow. Quick winter update, stores are good, no condensation on the top of the bees, all seems ok. Finger

End of October visit. Feeders all empty and removed. Celotex bonnet on top with metal roof. Bees looking good, nice big colony.

A windy day in the apiary yesterday. Feeding is done for now, battening down the hatches for the long winter. The bees were still bringing pollen in, braving the rain and wind.

A chat from in my car as it was raining and the nearby gardener was giving it some welly with the leaf blower. Includes the smell of Ivy from the bees latest foraging, beehive remodelling and an equestrian drive by.

Today marks the end of the varroa treatment time period, so I took out the strips. Only remembered after topping up the feeder so it was harder than necessary! A wood pigeon was stamping around beside me as I must have b

Hi all, this is a whistle stop visit to top up the feeders, check varroa drop, wasp activity and overall hive health. Stung by a grumpy sky raisin.

The late summer sunshine glows upon me as I talk about commencing winter feeding, hefting the hive, checking all is ok with the Queen and some observations about the surrounding natural history at this time of year.

A wonderful late summer visit to the bees. Local Helicopter pilots make themselves known as I talk over the days activities. Feeding will be paused to leave space for the winter bees to be created. Don't want to fill all

The golden haze of late summer transforms the apiary landscape into a sea of beige, punctuated only by the occasional cowslip, ragwort, and thistle. Standing here on August 17th, the silence is almost deafening – a stark

Today I talk about taking off a couple of supers, one for me and one left for the bees. Varroa treatment starts today, 6-8 weeks to go. Hive is now reconfigured for winter. One super under the brood box, ready to move ba

An audio chat from beside the hive, varroa monitoring using CO2 and a bee has a good check on my bee suit.

Adding supers, brood is booming. Mid summer check in.
Sponsor detection runs nightly. Check back soon.
No public pitch examples yet for this show.
Generate your own personalised pitchBased on semantic analysis of episode topics and host coverage, this show is a strong guest fit for executives in:
Industry fit is computed by PitchCentric using vector embeddings of the show's episode catalog.
Shows with the most semantically similar episode content. Pitch one, pitch all; producers cluster.








To pitch A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast, visit http://www.beekeepersdiarypodcast.com for contact information, then craft a tight one-paragraph hook that ties your expertise to a gap in their recent education coverage.
A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast is hosted by D. Briggs.. The show is categorised under education (leisure) and has published 41 episodes.
A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast has published 41 episodes.
A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast regularly covers education, leisure, hobbies. It sits in the education category, with a leisure focus.
A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast is accessible for guests with genuine education expertise. A personalised, episode-aware pitch will still outperform a generic one every time.
A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast hasn't explicitly signalled guest openness in recent episodes. That doesn't rule out pitching. your hook just needs to be especially compelling and relevant to their recent content.
Episodes of A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast average 6 minutes. a focused format where a clear narrative arc and tight preparation matter most.
Our data rates A Beekeeper’s Diary Podcast's guest bar at 80/100 (Premium tier). Established thought leaders with verified media credentials. Sign in to PitchCentric to see how your own Pod Score compares against this show.
Methodology. Booking Probability™ blends Listen Score, 30-day Virality, open-to-guests detection, and Apple ratings. Data refreshed every 60 minutes. Listen Score and Booking Probability are calculated by PitchCentric. Last enriched today.