Don’t Fear the Honeybee

Vasilia McCrady, owner of Heritage Apiary.
Vasilia McCrady, owner of Heritage Apiary.

The story below is from our January/February 2023 issue. For more stories like it, Subscribe Today. Thank you! 

Photos Courtesy of Heritage Apiary


Heritage Apiary wants to educate the community on the importance of honeybees.



Honeybees are worth learning about. Vasilia McCrady, owner of Heritage Apiary, knows this and strives to protect them through beekeeping and educating the public about these marvelous insects.

As a child visiting her father’s home town of Saravali, Greece, McCrady watched golden sunlight sparkle through amber honey as her uncle taught her about honeybees.  He explained that the taste of honey varies because of the location of the hives and the plants the bees had pollinated. McCrady was fascinated. She has since invested a great deal of time learning to be a master beekeeper.

Becoming a beekeeper requires years of study, including lengthy mentorship. McCrady’s mentor, Robert Howard, is a Virginia Certified Master Beekeeper who has seen many people discontinue beekeeping because it’s more expensive and time-consuming than they’d anticipated. He describes McCrady’s ability to find the time and energy to be a wife, mother and beekeeper as “amazing” and admires how she has turned beekeeping into a family pastime.

McCrady hosts hive tours at her home and schools and even retirement communities.  Tammy Riggs, the principal of Colonial Elementary School in Troutville, brings her 5th grade leadership group to the apiary for tours and uses the bees to impart leadership lessons to her students. For example, she uses the fact that honeybees each have a specific role — forager, drone, queen, etc. — to reinforce the leadership lesson that “No man is an island.” Just as each bee’s role is necessary for the success of the hive, humans need to work together to be successful.

In addition to leadership lessons, the honeybees teach us about living in harmony with nature. Barrie Ely of Roanoke and her two young boys say that the most important lesson McCrady has taught them about honeybees is not to fear them.  Barrie says that they now feel “gratitude” for “hardworking bees” and that their “fear has turned into affection.”

McCrady’s dream is for everyone to have a hive in their backyard but understands that that’s not realistic for most people.  However, she says easy ways to help honeybees include creating a water source for them, leaving dandelions and white clover in your yard, planting flowering trees or donating to your local bee association.

Hive tours at Heritage Apiary will resume in May. More information about tours and delicious and healing honey products can be found at facebook.com/HeritageApiary


The story above is from our January/February 2023 issue. For more stories like it, Subscribe Today. Thank you! 

Author

You Might Also Like:

Local Colors Festival May 16 Elmwood Park

Events Calendar May/June 2026

Top May and June Events Around the Roanoke Area
Bruce and Peggy Todaro on the deck of the Green Goat, with the Wasena Bridge behind them.

Wasena Will Come Full Circle Soon

The new bridge, skate park, and blueway will be welcomed by pedestrians, businesses, and customers. 
Artist Casey Murano discussed her watercolor, Come On, Surprise Me, at an artist talk.

Inspired by Nature

The celebration of a heralded book leads to ongoing community projects.
Artist Brian Counihan, Roanoke Arts and Culture Coordinator Douglas Jackson, and other artists and community members create people-centered floats for this year’s Daisy Art Parade in the main floor of Art Project Roanoke, located in the heart of downtown.

Where Everyone’s an Artist

Art Project Roanoke hosts community events on the first floor and artist studios above.
Group photo from one of the two national events Tincher Pitching did this winter in Roanoke, the Pitching Summit.

From Buchanan to the Big Leagues of Softball

When his daughter asked him to teach her how to pitch, Denny Tincher began a journey that would produce a national champion, a historic no-hitter, and a softball training empire rooted in the Roanoke Valley.
Dan Smith / Patrick Harrington

Do You Know… Dr. Mary McDonald?

Dr. Mary McDonald takes her message and her care for large animals worldwide.
This is a 1959 aerial view of Victory Stadium along Reserve Avenue SW.

The Game Changer

In 1961, an NFL exhibition game in Roanoke changed the city and professional football.
The Roanoker May June 2026 Best Of Roanoke Editors Note

Pride in Our People

Our annual Best of issue shows what makes Roanoke strong, resilient, and unmistakably local. 
Vinton’s Historic Gish Mill

Then and Now: Vinton’s Historic Gish Mill

From a 1797 grist mill to future dining and apartments, Vinton’s historic site endures.