Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now

New Bvlgari Resort and Mansions Project Announced for Abu Dhabi, Set for 2030 Opening

Switch 2 games not made by Nintendo aren’t selling — here’s why

Katy Perry Was 'Really Glad' When One 'American Idol' Contestant Exited the Show

U.S. Travel Agencies Air Ticket Sales Total $8.6 Billion in May 2025

Sifu dev’s new game Rematch launches without crossplay, but it’s coming

'The X-Files' Gillian Anderson Divides Fans With Bold Career Pivot: 'Bad Idea'

San Diego’s Hotel del Coronado Completes Extensive $550 Million Restoration

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Newsletter
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
You are at:Home » For this B.C. beekeeper, gathering groceries is sweet and sustainable | Canada Voices
Lifestyle

For this B.C. beekeeper, gathering groceries is sweet and sustainable | Canada Voices

18 June 20254 Mins Read

Open this photo in gallery:

Living in rural British Columbia has allowed Common the benefits of a bucolic lifestyle, which has naturally influenced her grocery shopping.Illustration by Kat Frick Miller

After the first time her hands entered a beehive, Julia Common says she became hooked. At the time, the now-72-year-old was only 21 and in the process of completing an agricultural studies degree at McGill University’s Macdonald Campus, near her hometown of Montreal.

She had spent her life up to that point being fired from jobs, yet she contacted Dr. S. Cameron Jay, a professor of entomology and a celebrated savant in the world of beekeeping, based at the University of Manitoba, where she took a summer job.

After that, “the bees were always part of my life,” she says. Common moved to rural Delta, B.C., where she has continued her beekeeping into her retirement. She manages 150 colonies of bees, some on her property and others at the Vancouver Convention Centre, where six acres of green rooftop play home to hives, and at Vancouver’s Fairmont Waterfront Hotel, where she’s been looking after the hotel’s bees since 2011.

She also makes her own honey, which she sells for her company, Bees Actually, and runs a number of projects including Bee Well, which works with seniors to reconnect them with food and land through beekeeping and gardening.

“The gardener is very important to all of the pollinators,” says Common, adding that the average person can help bees by planting food and habitats for them.

Living in rural British Columbia has allowed Common the benefits of a bucolic lifestyle, which has naturally influenced her grocery shopping.

How a B.C.-based sustainable fishing advocate grocery shops

Some of the bees from the 150 colonies Common cares for are on the property of pumpkin, potato, berry and garlic farmers, who give her produce. She also passes other vegetable farms on her drive through town and visits the nearby docks, where she gifts the honey she keeps in the back of her truck to farmers and fishermen. They, in turn, offer her gifts of produce and fish.

Her diet consists mostly of cheese, hard-boiled eggs, vegetables and honey tea with nuts, which she eats off the back of her truck during those 15-hour days, and some type of protein and carbohydrate when she is finished work.

What she saves on her own grub, she spends on the bees.

“I go through about $1,000 in white sugar every year,” she says. With it, she makes a syrup that the bees eat before the season’s over, to bulk them up, in hopes that they’ll make it through the winter.

Open this photo in gallery:

Beekeeper Julia Common at Southlands.Grant Harder/Grant Harder

How I save money on groceries: I eat less now, but better-quality foods. I have a vegetable garden and an apple tree, which help keep costs down.

How I splurge on groceries: I eat out a couple of times a week, which can be a bit expensive. I often meet beekeepers and we’ll go out and share a nice meal and have a conversation over that.

The hardest shopping habit to keep up: I go to many different places and travel to many farms to get organic produce which is more challenging than going to one place.

How I’ve changed my eating habits recently: I cut out most of the wine I used to drink. I’m intermittent fasting now, which has helped me drop about 30 pounds over a year, which has made it easier to move around between my truck and my bees. I have more energy. The equipment is very heavy, so the lost weight makes a difference.

Five items always in my cart:

  1. Chicken thighs – Newmans Fine Foods – $12.89 a pack: I usually pan fry them with lemon, a bit of bourbon and my homemade chili honey and eat that with some couscous.
  2. PEI butter – COWS Creamery – $9.99 for about half a pound: This butter is absolutely delicious. It comes from PEI cows, and I enjoy the taste better than the standard grocery store butter.
  3. Milk – Avalon Dairy – $9 for one litre: It tastes great, it’s local and it comes in the kind of milk bottle I had as a kid when the milkman used to come up the street, so it brings back nostalgia. The bottles are glass and are worth a fortune. I take them down to Thrifty Foods, a grocery store in town, and they give me money for them.
  4. Oatcakes – Walkers – $6.99: ​​I usually toss some honey and PEI butter on there for a quick breakfast.
  5. Cod – Local – $8 for 850 grams: I recently made cod cakes with some fish that I got from a local fisherman.
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Switch 2 games not made by Nintendo aren’t selling — here’s why

Lifestyle 19 June 2025

Katy Perry Was 'Really Glad' When One 'American Idol' Contestant Exited the Show

Lifestyle 19 June 2025

Sifu dev’s new game Rematch launches without crossplay, but it’s coming

Lifestyle 19 June 2025

'The X-Files' Gillian Anderson Divides Fans With Bold Career Pivot: 'Bad Idea'

Lifestyle 19 June 2025

DR Congo and Rwanda sign draft peace agreement

Lifestyle 19 June 2025

All Lune outfits in Clair Obscur Expedition 33 and how to unlock them

Lifestyle 19 June 2025
Top Articles

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024328 Views

What Time Are the Tony Awards? How to Watch for Free

8 June 2025148 Views

Toronto actor to star in Netflix medical drama that ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ fans will love, Canada Reviews

1 April 2025127 Views

The Mother May I Story – Chickpea Edition

18 May 202490 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Lifestyle 19 June 2025

'The X-Files' Gillian Anderson Divides Fans With Bold Career Pivot: 'Bad Idea'

Actress Gillian Anderson, who fans know from projects like The X-Files, The Crown, Sex Education…

San Diego’s Hotel del Coronado Completes Extensive $550 Million Restoration

DR Congo and Rwanda sign draft peace agreement

How to Avoid Hotel Overbooking: Tools and Tactics for Independent Hoteliers

About Us
About Us

Canadian Reviews is your one-stop website for the latest Canadian trends and things to do, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

New Bvlgari Resort and Mansions Project Announced for Abu Dhabi, Set for 2030 Opening

Switch 2 games not made by Nintendo aren’t selling — here’s why

Katy Perry Was 'Really Glad' When One 'American Idol' Contestant Exited the Show

Most Popular

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202419 Views

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024328 Views

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202441 Views
© 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.