

Honey Harvest and Heatwaves in Southern France:
How Nature Finds Its Balance

The summer of 2025 will be remembered as a season of extremes in Southern France. Two successive heatwaves, with soaring temperatures and relentless drought, put the entire ecosystem to the test. Our bees, on the front line, saw nectar sources dry up faster than usual, while our vineyard teams observed the same signs of stress on the vines.
At Domaines Paul Mas, we chose to install beehives among our vineyards to protect biodiversity and reinforce the natural balance around our vines. Their quiet presence offers a precious window into how life adapts. Despite the challenges, the bees worked tirelessly to produce a honey that faithfully reflects our Mediterranean terroir. “They worked incredibly well,” says beekeeper Pierre Maffre, who carefully tends the hives and harvests their honey.
Beekeeping and winemaking may seem worlds apart, yet they share the same story: deeply rooted in the South of France, both depend on a fragile climate and reveal, year after year, nature’s remarkable resilience.

Heatwaves 2025: A Challenge for Biodiversity
Weeks of scorching sun and parched soils forced local flora into early dormancy. Many flowers bloomed too briefly, some falling silent long before their time, unable to produce nectar under such heat.
For our bees, this meant fewer resources, slower foraging during the hottest hours, and colonies pushed to their limits. And yet, pollination continued—courageously, though more sporadically—depending on the rare blossoms still able to offer nectar.
The vines suffered in much the same way. Heat stress slowed ripening, stalled growth, and tired the foliage, requiring our winemakers to adapt their practices in real time. The symmetry between bees and vines is striking: two very different worlds, but both facing the same fragility—and the same challenge—under a changing climate.
Honey Harvest in a Time of Drought
Our 2025 honey harvest reflects these harsh conditions. With shorter blooms and limited nectar, production was modest compared to milder years: each frame of honeycomb yielded about 1 kilogram of honey.
When you consider the effort behind that number, it becomes even more humbling. To produce just 6 kilograms, some 15,000 worker bees toiled without pause. Each one contributed only 0.4 grams to the collective harvest. Almost nothing on its own—yet immense when multiplied by the energy of the hive. Every spoonful of honey carries within it the story of thousands of brief, tireless lives.
A summer bee lives barely 30 days, exhausting herself in an intense cycle of foraging. Her winter sisters, sturdier, survive up to three months, sustaining the colony through the cold season. Behind each jar lies a cycle of sacrifice, renewal, and transmission, where the individual fades into the strength of the collective.
And still, despite the heat and the scarcity, our bees gave us their very best. Fresh from the hive, the honey revealed itself as concentrated, powerful, and aromatic.
Mediterranean plants like lavender, rosemary, and thyme proved vital this summer. Their resilience in drought allowed for honeys that are dense, flavorful, and deeply expressive of place.
We experienced this firsthand: tasting honey just harvested in front of the Côté Mas wine cellar and restaurant, the lavender notes were unmistakable—shaped by the abundance of this plant surrounding the vineyard. A unique signature, telling the story of both the land and the season.
This mirrors what happens in the vineyard: in hot vintages, grapes accumulate higher sugars and more intense aromas, producing distinctive wines. In the same way, the honey of 2025 embodies the terroir’s voice—expressive and resilient, even in adversity. With harvest underway, we will soon know if this singular character is also present in our wines.

How Nature Adapts: Bees and Mediterranean Flora
Faced with the extremes of summer, our bees showed remarkable adaptability. When the sun became too harsh, they shifted their work to the cooler hours of morning and evening. By changing their rhythm, they saved energy and kept foraging, even under difficult conditions.
Mediterranean flora also played its part. Rosemary, thyme, lavender, and rockrose resisted drought and continued to flower, becoming sanctuaries for the bees when other plants fell silent. These hardy species left their mark on the honey: hints of garrigue, floral whispers of lavender, the taste of the landscape distilled into a jar.
And in the vineyard, the same adaptability could be observed. Despite water stress, grapes concentrated sugars and developed unusual profiles. Bees and vines, each in their own way, told the same story: that of a living, evolving terroir capable of offering its best even under duress.
A Terroir in Motion: Vines, Bees, and Climate
Both honey and wine are faithful witnesses of a year’s climate. Their taste, intensity, and character reveal the conditions in which they were born. In 2025, the heat left a deep imprint: concentrated honeys, powerful in flavor, and grapes with atypical profiles promising singular wines.
At Domaines Paul Mas, this complementarity between bees and vines illustrates the richness and complexity of our Mediterranean terroir. The hives placed among the vineyards are not just a symbol of biodiversity; they are part of a delicate balance where every element—plant, insect, soil, climate—contributes to the vitality of the whole.
Observing bees and vines side by side is like reading two faces of the same land. Both reflect nature’s strengths and vulnerabilities, but above all, its extraordinary capacity to adapt. Together, they compose a living narrative: that of a terroir in motion, expressing itself with authenticity despite the challenges of climate.

Honey and Wine: The Resilience of Terroir
From bees to vines, it is the same terroir speaking—a terroir alive, capable of transforming adversity into character. For our beekeepers and our winemakers alike, each harvest becomes a testimony to a singular year, a climate, and a land that never ceases to reinvent itself.
At Domaines Paul Mas, we see in this resilience a true source of inspiration. It reminds us that behind every glass of wine or every spoonful of honey lies far more than a product: it is a story of patience, of cycles, of tireless work, and of harmony with nature.
We invite you to discover these treasures of the South of France, where wine and honey come together to tell, in unison, the richness and authenticity of our Mediterranean terroir.

Our partner: Miellerie des Sources
We would like to express our gratitude to our partner, Miellerie des Sources, whose commitment goes far beyond the installation of our hives. Their dedication to caring for our residents is exemplary, keeping us informed of their health and progress, and taking charge of packaging the honey they so generously offer us, all the while sharing with us from time-to-time beautiful images and educational videos that we would like to share with you. Thanks to their expertise and constant attention, our bees thrive in an optimal environment, guaranteeing the exceptional quality of the honey we have the pleasure of sharing with our customers.