Our Work

Save the Bee is addressing the root causes that threaten the health of honey bees and humans

Save the Bee protects bees and beekeepers to keep our food supply safe, improve the environment, and sustain human health.

Founded in 2012, by the Turanksi Family, owners of GloryBee a B-Corp Certified honey and natural ingredient company, Save the Bee is a registered non-profit organization active in the Pacific Northwest and beyond.

We’re on a mission to help honey bees and humans thrive. Whether it’s planting pollinator habitat, funding bee research, or inspiring thousands to love and protect bees, Save the Bee is committed to helping bees continue their important work in our world.

Planting Pollinator Habitat

Pollen and nectar collected from a wide variety of plants, provide bees with a diet rich in protein, carbohydrates, and essential minerals, to build hives, raise their young, and make honey. Yet, natural habitat for bees and other native species is rapidly disappearing.

Because native flowering habitat is crucial to bee health – and the health of their fellow pollinators like butterflies and birds – Save the Bee is committed to planting 1 million square feet of pollinator habitat in farmland and elsewhere across the U.S.

The benefits of planting pollinator habitat reach beyond providing food for honey bees. Pollinator habit in farmland protects and conserves local biodiversity and helps to mitigate the environmental impact of certain agricultural practices. The introduction of flowering plants also helps our nation’s farmers by improving soil health and contributing to regenerative and sustainable agriculture.

Help plant pollinator habitat

Every $15 you give plants 10 square feet of flowers for hungry bees.

You’re one in a million

You can help us plant a million square feet of pollinator right from home when you grow a pollinator garden.

No yard? Even one square foot of pollinator habit – about the size of a large planter – will help bees and improve the environment.

Every square foot we plant makes a difference to the bees and their pollinator friends.

Accelerating Research in Honey Bee Health

Everything we know about what’s harming bees comes from the efforts of dedicated bee scientists across the U.S.

Save the Bee funds research to speed the discovery of solutions to address the issues affecting honey bees and provide beekeepers with best practices in hive management to increase the chances of colony survival.

Current Save the Bee funded research initiatives include:

  • Evaluating stressors on honey bees during crop pollination
  • Examining the long-term effects of pesticide exposure on colony health
  • Analyzing the nutrients in various pollens to understand the best foods for bees
  • Investigating how well common treatments work to stop the Varroa mite

Research is critical to understanding the threats facing honey bees and developing new technologies to better their health, and ours.

Meet our research partners

Learn more about the innovators driving change in the welfare of honey bees.

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Inspiring the Next Generation of Bee-Keepers

Commercial beekeeping is a tough but vitally important job. As honey consumption in the U.S. has increased, the number of beekeepers has decreased – since the 1940s, we’ve lost about half the total commercial beekeepers.

At Save the Bee, we are inspiring the next generation of beekeeper through education, support and connection to others in the industry. Of particular importance, is supporting aspiring beekeepers from underrepresented groups through scholarships to master beekeeper programs that prepare students for careers in commercial beekeeping.

Key to saving the bee, is nurturing a movement of people concerned about climate change and food safety and responding with action, oftentimes starting in their own backyard. We campaign to bring together bee-lovers from all over the U.S. to inspire them to be backyard scientists, plant pollinator habitat, raise funds, and spread the word on the importance of bees on the lives of every one of us.

Our work contributes to these UN Sustainable Development Goals

02

Zero

Hunger

08

DEcent work and
Economic Growth

13

Climate 

action

15

Life 

On Land

Our Team

Lynn Hellwege

Board Member

Lynn Hellwege

Jan Lohman

 Board Secretary

Lynn Hellwege

Eric Mason

Executive Director

Alan Turanski

Board President

Dewey Caron

Board Secretary

Darcey Howard

Board Treasurer

Lynn Hellwege

Board Member

Jan Lohman

 Board Secretary

Eric Mason

Executive Director