
Bee-Skep Making
Heritage, folklore and how to make and use your own skeps
Chris Park(Author)
Herbert Press Ltd
Will be published approx. on 25. June 2026
Book
Hardback
160 pages
978-1-78994-330-6 (ISBN)
Description
A beekeeper's guide to straw skep-building, including sections on bee history and mythology, practical skep beekeeping, and making honey and wax products.
Dating back to ancient times, the bee skep is essentially an upturned lipwork basket with a small bee entrance near the base. Offering a less intensive industrialised environment than the box hives widely used today, skeps are friendlier to the bees' way of working and - properly used - can be better for their health and resilience.
Perhaps you've considered moving away from box hives yourself and revitalising age-old beekeeping traditions? With no full-time skep-makers in the UK, the practice is on Heritage Craft's Red List of endangered crafts so you may need to make your own.
Master skep maker and beekeeper Chris Park helps you learn these revered skills with step-by-step photographic guidance on skep construction, as well as instructions for making the protective straw cone or 'hackle' to go over the top. He provides tips on settling swarms and managing colonies using traditional techniques, and for harvesting your honey and honeycomb, draining them into jars and producing mead and candles.
Woven into this is a rich potted history of skep beekeeping, its folklore and heritage, and an exploration of honey's medicinal properties, offering up a wealth of knowledge as you perfect your skep-making skills.
Dating back to ancient times, the bee skep is essentially an upturned lipwork basket with a small bee entrance near the base. Offering a less intensive industrialised environment than the box hives widely used today, skeps are friendlier to the bees' way of working and - properly used - can be better for their health and resilience.
Perhaps you've considered moving away from box hives yourself and revitalising age-old beekeeping traditions? With no full-time skep-makers in the UK, the practice is on Heritage Craft's Red List of endangered crafts so you may need to make your own.
Master skep maker and beekeeper Chris Park helps you learn these revered skills with step-by-step photographic guidance on skep construction, as well as instructions for making the protective straw cone or 'hackle' to go over the top. He provides tips on settling swarms and managing colonies using traditional techniques, and for harvesting your honey and honeycomb, draining them into jars and producing mead and candles.
Woven into this is a rich potted history of skep beekeeping, its folklore and heritage, and an exploration of honey's medicinal properties, offering up a wealth of knowledge as you perfect your skep-making skills.
Reviews / Votes
This book is truly inspiring. It delves into the essential role bees have played throughout history and explores how we can create natural habitats for them while moving away from more industrialised approaches to beekeeping. - Wolfgang Buttress, ArtistMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Illustrations
Illustrated throughout with colourful photographs
Dimensions
Height: 282 mm
Width: 218 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
860 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78994-330-6 (9781789943306)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Chris Park is the world's leading expert on bee skeps and teaches skep-making for the British Beekeeping Association, the National Honey Show and special interest groups. He is also a skep-beekeeper, apitherapist and writer with a wider interest in arts and crafts, ancient technologies, eco-building and folk music.
Content
Introduction
1. Myth, folklore and superstition
2. Bees and hive symbolism
3. Revd Charles Butler
4. Making a skep
5. Making hackles
6. Skep beekeeping
7. The harvest home
8. Processing
9. Mead and metheglin
The End...
1. Myth, folklore and superstition
2. Bees and hive symbolism
3. Revd Charles Butler
4. Making a skep
5. Making hackles
6. Skep beekeeping
7. The harvest home
8. Processing
9. Mead and metheglin
The End...