Current:Home > FinanceInmates all abuzz after first honey harvest as beekeepers in training -Prime Money Path
Inmates all abuzz after first honey harvest as beekeepers in training
View
Date:2025-04-14 16:56:13
The Leon County jail in Tallahassee, Florida, is all abuzz these days.
Inmates in a special training program designed to smooth re-entry into the community after incarceration are getting to see the fruits of their labor – or rather the honey of their labor – for the first time.
The Leon County Sheriff's EARTH Haven program, or Ecology And Reentry Training Hub Haven, has four active beehives that inmates are taking care of with hopes of harvesting honey and beeswax.
The program began about a year ago, joining a smattering of similar initiatives at detention facilities across the country, from Washington to Minnesota to Georgia.
In Tallahassee, the first harvest was last week.
Leon County Sgt. Daniel Whaley showed two inmates how to remove the bees from their hives with smoke and to check if the combs had honey ready for harvesting. The six-month program prepares the incarcerated for the workforce once they are released.
"It's teaching me how to wake up all the time to go to work," said Donatarius Gavin, who had been in the reentry program for 22 days at harvest time and said he thoroughly enjoyed learning about beekeeping. "Mostly keeps my mind at ease."
Inmates in the program can earn a beekeeper apprentice certificate from the University of Florida.
If they don't complete the program before they are released, they can choose to finish it and receive the certificate on their own.
Following the apprentice certification, inmates could choose to further their education and become master beekeepers, which would allow them to travel, inspect other beekeeper's hives and help them better their apiaries.
Gavin hopes to take a hive home with him when he is released. He plans on using the beeswax to make wave grease for hair.
As a father of five, he hopes he can teach his kids the skills he is learning.
"I'm having a lot of fun with it so far, I think they'll like it," Gavin said. "I think they'll like to get in the bee suit and do the whole thing."
About 7.5 gallons of honey were harvested last week. It will be given to employees in the Leon County Sheriff's Office.
Eventually Whaley hopes that the inmates can package the honey to sell at local stores as well as items made with the beeswax including lip balms, candles, soaps and more.
Contributing: Donovan Slack, USA TODAY
veryGood! (3)
Related
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Sperm donor father of at least 550 kids banned from donating any more sperm
- What Caelynn Miller-Keyes Really Thinks of Dean Unglert's Vasectomy Offer
- EU law targets Big Tech over hate speech, disinformation
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Meta rolls out more parental controls for Instagram and virtual reality
- You're@Work: The Right Persona for the Job
- Elon Musk just became Twitter's largest shareholder
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Researchers explore an unlikely treatment for cognitive disorders: video games
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen's It Takes Two Co-Star Reveals Major Easter Egg You Totally Missed
- Suspected American fugitive who allegedly faked death insists he is Irish orphan in bizarre interview
- Ginny & Georgia's Brianne Howey Is Pregnant With First Baby
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- U.S. targets Iran and Russia with new sanctions over hostages, wrongfully detained Americans
- U.S. resumes deportation flights to Cuba after 2-year pause
- COMIC: How a computer scientist fights bias in algorithms
Recommendation
What to watch: O Jolie night
It's Been A Minute: Digital Privacy In A Possible Post-Roe World
How the false Russian biolab story came to circulate among the U.S. far right
Apple workers in Atlanta become company's 1st retail workers to file to unionize
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Billie Eilish Is Now Acting as the Bad Guy in Surprise TV Role
Here's Why Red Lipstick Makes You Think of Sex
8 bodies found dumped in Mexican resort of Cancun as authorities search for missing people