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Two Harbors vegetable, tree, honeybee farm is all the buzz

Little Waldo Farm will host a plant sale from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday.

bee keeping on small farm
A honeybee enters a hive at the Little Waldo Farm on May 17 north of Two Harbors.
Clint Austin / Duluth News Tribune

TWO HARBORS — When Jadell Cavallin heard a surprise backyard visitor at 2 a.m., her sneaking suspicion was spot on.

“A bear showed up. I could hear it popping as he was ripping it open,” Cavallin said, pointing to a lone beehive.

bee keeping on small farm
Daffodils bloom in a garden bed at the Little Waldo Farm on May 17.
Clint Austin / Duluth News Tribune

Hours before she’d planned to replace the hive’s aging roof, the bear ate half a frame before she intercepted. “It was not scared of me; it ran up a tree,” she said.

She’d know in a couple days if it got the queen bee. “There’s a roar you can hear in their buzz that sounds completely different than when they’re calm,” she said.

bee keeping on small farm
Jadell Cavallin explains how she gets bees in these containers for her hives.
Clint Austin / Duluth News Tribune

This is among the wealth of Cavallin’s knowledge. She and her spouse, Joe, are behind Little Waldo Farm , a 10-acre honeybee, small fruit, vegetable and tree farm.

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The Cavallins and their operation are active in the community, with regular appearances at the Two Harbors Farmers Market.

On Sunday, Cavallin joins the opening of the Clover Valley Farm Trail , a route of 11 locally owned small farms , from Duluth to Two Harbors, offering self-service farm stands from noon-5 p.m. every Sunday from May 28 through October.

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And, Little Waldo Farm is hosting an annual spring plant sale from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, May 27, and June 3 at 1845 Waldo Road, Two Harbors.

The Cavallins grew up in Two Harbors. Their 10 acres is located on a former Lake County 4-H area. “When we started here, our front yard was bare,” Jadell Cavallin said.

bee keeping on small farm
A special cage used to ship a queen bee.
Clint Austin / Duluth News Tribune
bee keeping on small farm
A frame from a beehive showing different wax structures the bees produce.
Clint Austin / Duluth News Tribune

During the News Tribune visit, much of their open fields were occupied by gardens, which is her focus, while her husband is the “heavy lifter and construction person.”

“He has no interest in beekeeping," she said.

They erected their first high tunnel in 2013 with the support of a Natural Resources Conservation stipend.

bee keeping on small farm
Beehives at the Little Waldo Farm.
Clint Austin / Duluth News Tribune

Today, Cavallin serves on the Lake Superior Sustainable Farming Association board. She writes a nature blog , teaches gardening and honey beekeeping classes, and presents through the Lake County branch of the University of Minnesota Extension Service.

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bee keeping on small farm
Jadell Cavallin, of Two Harbors, talks about how she uses a hoop house at the Little Waldo Farm.
Clint Austin / Duluth News Tribune

And, she’s in her ninth season of beekeeping.

Cavallin sorted through an inactive hive, sharing an outpouring of fascinating tidbits.

Each colony is distinguishable by its smell.

Bee mating happens in flight.

Queens fly twice in life, to mate or to swarm.

“The beekeeper’s job is to catch them before that happens,” she said of the latter.

bee keeping on small farm
Honeybees in a hive at the Little Waldo Farm.
Clint Austin / Duluth News Tribune

Learn about beekeeping

  • What: Little Waldo Farm and the Lake Superior Sustainable Farming Association beekeeping field day
  • When: 2-5 p.m. Aug. 15
  • Where: 1845 Waldo Road, Two Harbors
  • Registration: sfa-mn.org/lake-superior
MORE BY MELINDA LAVINE
Moriah Skye, aka stage name Robyn Graves, will perform at the Homegrown Music Festival with Campfire Tranarchists and Flip Arkulary.

Melinda Lavine is an award-winning, multidisciplinary journalist with 17 years professional experience. She joined the Duluth News Tribune in 2014 as its features editor, and today, she writes about the people, the heartbeat of the community.

Melinda grew up in central North Dakota, a first-generation American and the daughter of a military dad.

In 2006, she earned bachelor's degrees in English and Communications from the University of North Dakota, and that summer, she started her career as a copy editor and page designer at the Grand Forks (N.D.) Herald, a Forum Communications Co. sister publication. In 2012, she helped launch the Herald's features section, as the editor, before moving east to do the same at the DNT.

Contact her: 218-723-5346, mlavine@duluthnews.com.
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