Oregon Honey & Mead Festival 2025 at Edenvale Winery – Medford, OR

Oregon Honey & Mead Festival 2025 at Edenvale Winery – Medford, OR
Don’t miss this upcoming event in Medford, OR. Happening on Saturday, September 13, 2025 at Edenvale Winery. Doors open at 11:00 AM.
Taste the sweetness of Oregon Honey and Mead! Festival guests should prepare to be delighted by the beauty of one of Southern Oregon’s oldest and most historic wineries. Located in the rolling hills of Medford, near Phoenix, Oregon and minutes from highway 99 and Rogue Valley International Airport (MFR), Edenvale is family friendly with plenty of space to walk the grounds around the mansion, enjoy music and sample honey while 21+ may sample honey and purchase mead (click HERE for map and directions). Guests will park and enter at Edenvale’s south entrance.Attendees will learn about pollinators, botanical aspects of honey production, native plants, native bees, research findings on honey bee health, soil, seed, healthy flower forage and other components of habitat health.Early Bird guests may participate in the Honey Tasting class with Sharon Schmidt and Delsey Maus. There will also be a talk by Paul Davitt who will talk about Cascade Girl organization’s Veteran Program and finally, Dave Kollen from the Xerces Society who will talk about Pollinators of the Night.There will be music by Danielle Kelly Quartet, Mountaintop Sound and Shybo and the Twisted Vines in the main tent, art exhibits, native plant education, honey sampling, honey for purchase, some kids’ activities and more. Edenvale chefs will prepare foods for purchase and the Edenvale Tasting Room will be open.The Cascade Girl Organization is a 501(c)3 nonprofit the mission of which is to educate people about food system pollinators of the Cascade region and their impact on planetary survival via science, culture and the arts. The Festival is a fundraiser for the Cascade Girl Organization’s programs for kids and for veterans.At it’s heart, the Oregon Honey & Mead Festival is a celebration of apiculture and agriculture, toasting the work of all farmers and agricultural pollinators. Native bees also require pollen and nectar to reproduce and to provide valuable pollination which makes food for people and animals. To make delicious honey, honey bees rely upon being able to find food in the form of nectar from flowers and forbs. They also require pollen for reproduction and energy – and all pollinators need water unspoiled by toxins and chemicals.There is no better place for such a celebration than Jackson County, Oregon which became GMO free in 2014. Mead, the drink of the ancient Vikings is the product of fermented honey. The invited mead and honey producers include Oran mör Artisan Mead, Lazy Z Ranch mead and Siskiyou Mead who bring their talents to the table along with principles of earth science, biology, botany, food science and history. $20 Tickets and Kids Free. Veterans and indiginous attendees free with ID.