Every year on May 20th, the world comes together to celebrate World Bee Day: a global effort to raise awareness about the vital role bees and other pollinators play in sustaining life on Earth.
At Earthmade, this day reflects everything we stand for: working with nature to protect and restore the systems that feed us.
The History of World Bee Day
World Bee Day was officially established by the United Nations in 2017 and is celebrated annually on May 20th. The date honors the birthday of Anton Janša, a pioneer of modern beekeeping from Slovenia.
The purpose of World Bee Day is to:
- Raise awareness about the importance of pollinators
- Highlight the threats bees face, including habitat loss and pesticide exposure
- Encourage global action to protect pollinators and biodiversity
Today, it’s recognized worldwide as a moment to reflect, educate, and take action.
Why Bees Need Our Help
Bee populations have been declining due to:
- Chemical exposure from pesticides
- Loss of natural habitats
- Climate change
- Monocropping and reduced biodiversity
These challenges not only threaten bees, they threaten global food security.
How Earthmade Supports the Mission
At Earthmade, protecting pollinators starts below the surface.
By restoring soil biology and reducing the need for synthetic chemicals, we help create farming systems that are safer and more supportive for bees and other beneficial organisms.
Our approach:
- Encourages natural plant resilience
- Reduces chemical dependency
- Supports biodiversity across the farm ecosystem
When farms work with nature, pollinators can thrive.
A Day, and a Movement
World Bee Day is more than a celebration, it’s a call to action.
From farmers to consumers, everyone has a role to play:
- Supporting sustainable agriculture
- Planting pollinator-friendly environments
- Choosing food grown with fewer harmful inputs
At Earthmade, we believe that protecting bees is part of a larger mission: rebuilding natural systems that sustain life.
On May 20, 2026, let’s celebrate the pollinators that make our world bloom, and commit to protecting them for generations to come.