For her honeybee healing hut, a Blaketown beekeeper is spreading good vibrations - Action News
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For her honeybee healing hut, a Blaketown beekeeper is spreading good vibrations

Beekeeper Nicole Russell has opened up a business with true buzz in Blaketown. Visitors can relax, smell the ocean air and relax on top of thousands of buzzing bees.

Nicole Russell was looking for ways to protect her hives from N.L. winter

Woman in green dress sitting on a bench
Beekeeper Nicole Russell says people can book a sessions at her Honey Bee Healing Hut in Blaketown, where they can recline over thousands of bees. (Melissa Tobin/CBC)

A beekeeper on Newfoundland'sAvalon Peninsula is inviting people to check out the good vibrations that bees can make by sitting atop thousands of them.

Nicole Russell has opened up the Honey Bee Healing Hut in Blaketown, where people can visit a shed she's fitted out with a vaulted ceiling, and a reclining bed that sits atop four beehives.

"They're circulating air and they're buzzing. They're bringing in pollen and honey and you're on the bed and you're just relaxing," Russell told CBC News.

She added people and the bees are kept separately in the hut, so people don't have to worry about bees flying about inside.

"The bees have their own entrance and they can only come into their own hive. They're double screened, so they can't get into this hut at all and they can't get in under the bed, only into their hive."

WATCH| CBC's Carolyn Stokes reclines amongbees in buzzy new business in Blaketown:

This business in Blaketown will help you relax to the sounds and vibrations of buzzing bees

2 months ago
Duration 4:40
Its a new way to unwind, and the owners of Raspberry Cottage in Blaketown, N.L., swear by it. Their honeybee healing hut pairs the buzzing bees with relaxation a place to lay while soaking in the sights, sounds, smells and feelings of working hives. The CBCs Carolyn Stokes stopped by.

She said visitors to the Blaketown hut it's south of Dildo, Trinity Bay will notice three things when they step inside: the sound, the smell and the vibrations.

Person in white protestive gear walking towards a blue-painted hut.
Beekeeper Nicole Russell says she got the idea to start the Honey Bee Healing Hut after she lost five of her seven bee hives to Newfoundland's cold and wet winter. (Melissa Tobin/CBC)

Bees vibrate at a high frequency, so when people lay down on top of the stage above the hives, they can feel the effects, said Russell.

"I'm not a doctor so I can't really say but I do know that when I lie down on the bed, I can actually feel a little buzz in my fingers and in my toes."

She likened it to a mini-massage. In addition, people can also smell warm wax, pollen and propolis, which bees make from certain types of trees.

"There's a pheromone that we're taking in and we're breathing that all in," said Russell.

Russell also operates theRaspberry Cottage Apiary Boutique where she sells crafts and items made from bee-products.

Looking to protect hive

The idea to start the healing hutbegan after she experienced a devastating loss of five of her seven hives last spring, said Russell.

"So I went down this rabbit hole how do I keep the bees safe through this cold and wet winter? And Newfoundland is cold, wet and, you know, probably goingbe cold and wet forever," she said.

In her research, she found people were overwintering theirbee hives in sheds. Then she read about the longstanding European practice of people lying on top of the bee hives.

"Bee therapy has probably existed as long as humans have existed. And I thought, 'Well, this is great. This is me helping them and them helping us,'" said Russell.

"What a great symbiotic relationship that could be. And so that's how it started."

Creating a cozy space

When it came to creating her own bee hut, Russell knew she wanted it to be cozy and a bright space.

"I wanted the ceiling to be vaulted. I wanted there to be wood and it to look a bit rustic. I wanted to use this old door that I found from a house in New Harbour, a solid wood, so heavy I had to have, like, help to lift it."

LISTEN| CBC's Melissa Tobin gets a tour of the Honey Bee Healing Hut and about the benefits of bees:
Weekend AM's Melissa Tobin meets Nicole Russell, owner of The Honey Bee Healing Hut in Blaketown, NL and learns how lying with bees can be a calming experience.

Russell said even if people don't buy into the health benefits the bees could be providing, they can still take something positive from the experience.

A side of a blue painted wall with bees flying into an entrance.
Beekeeper Nicole Russell says there are four hives living in the bottom of the hut and they have their own entrance, with a screen keeping them from flying around where people are lying down. (Melissa Tobin/CBC)

"You're lying on top of thousands of bees. You know, when can you ever get that close to, you know, to hives? When can you ever get that close to something? So magnificent really," she said.

She linked it to being near a low, crackling fire or a waterfall.

Moreover, she said the bees are fanning themselves to maintain their temperature, which creates a cozy effect in the hut.

"It's like a nice sauna, kind of," she said. "It's nice and warm."

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With files from Weekend AM and Here and Now

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