Tucked just off the sun-drenched back roads that connect Thousand Oaks to the wider Conejo Valley, Bennett’s Honey Farm is one of those places that feels like a genuine secret — the kind of find you stumble upon and immediately want to tell everyone about. Nestled in Moorpark near the Thousand Oaks border, this working honey farm has been a beloved local institution for decades, and once you’ve spent an afternoon here, you’ll completely understand why generations of families keep coming back.
The farm sits on a quietly spectacular stretch of Southern California countryside, where the air smells faintly sweet even before you reach the main stand. The moment you pull into the parking area and spot the hand-painted signs and cheerful yellow-and-black branding, something shifts. The pace of life slows down. The world feels a little more connected to what actually matters.
What Bennett’s does best — besides producing some of the most flavorful raw honey you will ever taste — is make the experience of beekeeping and local agriculture genuinely accessible and fun. The farm stand is the beating heart of the operation, stocked with dozens of varietal honeys that range from light and floral wildflower blends to deep, complex sage and avocado honeys that you simply cannot find at any grocery store. Each variety carries a distinct personality, and the staff are wonderfully knowledgeable without being the least bit pretentious. Ask a question and you’ll get a real answer, often with a sample spoon extended in your direction before you’ve finished the sentence.
Beyond the honey itself, Bennett’s carries a thoughtfully curated selection of beeswax products — candles, lip balms, skin creams — all made from what’s harvested right here. These make extraordinary gifts, the kind that feel personal and rooted in place rather than ordered off a shelf. If you’re visiting with children, this is especially worth noting: kids are absolutely captivated by the observation hive displays and the chance to learn, in simple and vivid terms, how honey actually gets from flower to jar.
The farm also hosts educational tours by appointment, which offer a rare up-close look at active beehives with proper protective gear provided. It’s an experience that straddles the line between thrilling and meditative — standing among thousands of bees, watching the organized choreography of a colony at work, is something that stays with you.
Bennett’s is open most weekends, and the drive out from central Thousand Oaks is a pleasure in itself, winding through rolling hills that remind you just how spectacularly beautiful this corner of California remains. Bring a cooler for your honey haul, wear comfortable shoes, and leave your hurry at home. This is a place that rewards slowness and curiosity in equal measure.
Whether you’re a longtime local who somehow hasn’t made the trip yet, or a visitor looking for something that genuinely reflects the agricultural soul of the Conejo Valley, Bennett’s Honey Farm delivers in the most unpretentious, golden, delicious way possible. Go once, and you’ll be back every season.