by Mike Knaak
editor@thenewsleaders.com
What do solar panels, bees and apples have in common?
It turns out quite a bit.
On a few acres west of St. Joseph, a solar farm, bees, a cidery and smart entrepreneurs are collaborating to protect the environment and distill a tasty drink.
This month, Milk & Honey Ciders introduced Solar Sweet Farm Cider, a cider blended with honey from the hives on the solar farm next to their orchard.
Adam Theis, Milk & Honey’s co-founder and cider maker, said the cidery produced about 140 gallons of the special drink. It was released at the cidery on Oct. 6 and it’s also available in restauranteur Kim Bartmann’s Twin Cities establishments, including Tiny Diner, Bryant-Lake Bowl and Pat’s Tap.
“It’s a fruity, floral cider,” Theis said of the drink that’s made from Golden Russet and Kingston Black apples. “We made a special cider to highlight they have hives on the solar site.”
The collaboration starts with the 19,000 solar panels on 60 acres between Milk & Honey and Interstate Highway 94. IPS Solar of Roseville runs the solar operation that produces enough energy to power about 1,000 average homes. The hives belong to Bare Honey of Minneapolis.
Pulling all the players together was the work of Fresh Energy of St. Paul.
Rob Davis, director of the organization’s Center for Pollinators in Energy, said that everyone involved had shared values to make productive use of land around the panels by planting native plants that also help hold the soil around the panels.
“Bees are in dire straits and urgently need acres and acres of flowering plants on land that is not sprayed with insecticide,” Davis said. “Beekeepers are excited to have hives in safe places, cideries love the idea of connecting clean energy to food on your plate or in your glass.”
In addition to producing honey for the special cider, the bees pollinate the apple trees in the orchard. Milk & Honey has about 600 trees on the site and they have plans to add 3,000 more, Theis said.
This is Milk & Honey’s sixth harvest. The cidery started with 2,000 trees on a two-acre site near Cold Spring before moving to rural St. Joseph last year. The cidery ferments apples from the harvest once a year and produces about seven different ciders.
Fresh Energy aims to shape and drive a realistic and visionary energy policy that benefits all. They’ve been working on energy policy for more than 25 years.
The major subscribers to the IPS solar project are the St. Cloud, Annandale and Paynesville school districts.
The solar panels are visible from I-94. “When you drive by and see it, think about people’s connections,” David said. “It’s saving school districts money, in order to have an apple harvest you need millions and millions of visits by bees and if bees don’t have a place to forage we’ll lose our crops.”

Jessica Timmer of Sartell and Joe Westerlind of Clear Lake challenge their spouses, Chris Timmer and Susie Westerlind, to a game of Sequence while enjoying beverages Oct. 6 at Milk & Honey Ciders.

Derik Weldon, Kate Ritger, and Cecelia Weldon, 10, all of St. Joseph, stretch dough for honey drizzled pizza Oct. 6 at Milk & Honey Ciders. Ritger owns Just Food Collective, a St. Joseph food-truck business.

Melissa Froehling (left) of Sartell, and Patty Bartos of St. Joseph pause to tickle tiny cheeks when Melissa’s husband, Mike, brings their 17-week-old baby for a visit. The women, who were also celebrating a 60th birthday party for Sue Froehling Oct. 6, enjoyed the new solar cider release at Milk & Honey Ciders. Froehling stated it was “nicely balanced,” while Bartos said it was “really good – sweet, but not too sweet.”