About Us

We are Justin and Adrienne and we have been beekeeping and farming together since we moved to Kitsap County in 2021. We bought our own farm in Kingston in 2025 and are looking forward to feeding the community and stewarding this land for many years to come.

We try our best to use minimal packaging, sell locally, and ensure that our practices are helping to build healthy soil. We grow microgreens that we harvest weekly year-round, and otherwise focus on growing storage crops like sweet potatoes, corn, onions, winter squash and more. We also keep chickens and ducks for their eggs and the laughs.

About Us

What we Grow


Honey

Justin was a Beekeeping Extension volunteer in the Peace Corps in Paraguay (where we met!). We now keep hives on our farm in Kingston, WA.

Honey-Jars

Our bees forage on a wide variety of Pacific Northwest plants including maples, blackberries, fireweed, and wildflowers in the area, and our honey reflects this - it may be a slightly different color and flavor profile from year to year based on what was available for the bees to forage.

Honey-Frame

Contact Us for prices and availability. We typically harvest in late summer.

Microgreens

Microgreens are small, delicious, baby vegetable greens that can be added to almost any meal. They are great in salads, smoothies, soups, stir fries, scrambled eggs, or tacos! You can add a handful of fresh microgreens to just about anything to add flavor, texture, and nutrition. We grow a variety of microgreens including broccoli, lettuce mixes, radishes, and peas.

Microgreens

Our microgreens are available for sale in the market at Bay Hay and Feed in Rolling Bay on Bainbridge Island.

Storage Crops

We first started growing sweet potatoes with Betsey from Laughing Crow Farm on Bainbridge Island, and this grew into a love of all things storage crops.

harvesting sweet potatoes

We grow corn (grinding corn and popcorn), sweet potatoes, potatoes, garlic, winter squash, onions, and more. We eat them all through the winter (soups and stews! veggie burgers! roasts! just imagine the possibilities) and share it with you via Kitsap Fresh.

glass gem corn

Support Small Farms

We know that buying your food from small farms isn’t always the simplest thing. You have to go somewhere other than where you get most of your groceries, and sometimes it costs more.

However, these farms often grow a wider variety of crops using more sustainable practices, which means the food is fresher, more nutritionally dense, and grown closer to where you live. By choosing local, seasonal produce from small farms, you’re not just getting better food, you’re also helping to create a more resilient and healthy local food system.

Thank you for supporting your small farmers, wherever you live.

Connect

Subscribe to our newsletter to get updates from us once a quarter or so. We promise to include fun bee facts.

You can read previous newsletters in the Archive.

Contact us

Get in touch!

email: contact@beesandgreens.com

instagram: @bees_and_greens