Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Honey Acres

    4.3 (11 reviews)
    Closed 8:00 am - 3:30 pm

    Honey Acres Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Honey Acres

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    Reviews With Photos

    Honey Acres - outside
    Stacy P.

    My class went here on a field trip back in the day, and for some reason the place stuck with me even all these years later. We stopped in for a visit last week, and left with almost $50 worth of honey, plus some more great memories. Honey Acres makes several kinds of honey and mustard, including their award winning Clover Honey. You can sample all while on-site, and also purchase them to go in jars or honey sticks. The place basically consists of the gift shop and the museum. The gift shop speaks for itself. In the museum you'll learn a bit about bees and the honey making process, plus get to see a live bee hive, untouched by humans. The whole thing probably won't take you more than a half hour, but it's a great way to spend a bit of your afternoon!

    Products for sale
    Melissa S.

    This is a cute but tiny place to learn about bees and live bees to watch in museum and get a few things like raw honey or flavored honey spreads. Also chocolate with honey inside with orange or mint and raspberry ect. Not as much as I would have thought here but a quick spot to check out.

    Cool exhibit

    See all

    Photo of A C.
    0
    12
    0

    2 months ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    8 months ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    2 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    14 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 1

    6 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    2 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    5 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    4 years ago

    Amazing! If you want local honey and honey made products this is the place to go! Super friendly staff too!!!

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of TC C.
    3
    23
    0

    10 years ago

    Business owner information

    Photo of Tiarra D.

    Tiarra D.

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    9 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    Ask the Community - Honey Acres

    Review Highlights - Honey Acres

    honey acres aka the bee's knees aka heaven for a pooh bear aka the pollen palace - this place is phenomenal.

    Mentioned in 2 reviews

    Read more highlights

    Verify this business for free

    Get access to customer & competitor insights.

    Verify this business

    Milwaukee Public Museum

    Milwaukee Public Museum

    4.3(204 reviews)
    33.5 miWestown, Downtown

    Though I'm sure the new MPM will be amazing, I'm still bummed to know this museum is closing soon!…read moreMy kids are big fans of this place. So crazy that it hasn't changed a bit since I would go here on school trips years and years ago. The exhibits continue to offer so much! From taking you through the dino-ages, to exploring the rainforest, and Native American history. Lots of areas to check out. Favorite has to be the Streets of Old Milwaukee which is just so immersive. We also love the butterfly room (so many live butterflies!) and the planetarium dome theater, which shows various educational films. They ask that you don't have food and drinks while touring around (understandable), but they have a huge cafe/dining area on the ground level. It's great because you can bring your own packed lunch and snacks, or purchase from their various offerings. Underground parking, easy check-in, and friendly staff, too!

    I grew up in the Fox Valley and have fond memories of the occasional field trip to the Milwaukee…read moreMuseum and the occasional family trip to visit as well. It took until adulthood for me to learn there's a button to make the rattlesnake move. (If you know, you know). I enjoyed bringing my own kids when they were little and seeing the exhibits through their enthusiasm. I have nostalgic memories of MPM and I really hope that transcends to the soon to be new facility. I hear the streets of Milwaukee exhibit will be modified in the move. To the powers that be that may stumble across this review - this exhibit and what you do with it when you move will do a lot to make or break public sentiment.

    Photos
    Milwaukee Public Museum - Skull

    Skull

    Milwaukee Public Museum - Bear with real bees (I believe).

    Bear with real bees (I believe).

    Milwaukee Public Museum - Africa!

    See all

    Africa!

    John Michael Kohler Arts Center - bathroom

    John Michael Kohler Arts Center

    4.4(23 reviews)
    53.4 mi
    $

    This quote was not originally John Michael Kohler's, but he truly championed its meaning and…read moreintegrated its spirit into the businesses he built, the work he provided for his employees, and the causes he supported. John Ruskin: "Life without labor is guilt; labor without art is brutality." The JMK Art Museum celebrates art that is created not so much by highly trained or famous artists, but by regular people who have found sincere and approachable ways to express themselves. That is what makes the experience feel so genuine and human. I very much enjoyed all of the installations in this small but distinguished museum. It is thoughtfully curated, inspiring, and quietly powerful in its message. I would absolutely enjoy coming back to see future installations. A real gem for Wisconsin. ps - And don't forget to check out all of the bathrooms!

    This was one of the reasons I came to visit Sheboygan. The people working the front desk were super…read morethorough and explaining how the arts center is set up. This art center is one of the best I've been to because of the variety of art I loved exploring all of the bathrooms. Those were some of my favorite, and I also really enjoyed the exhibit that had a variety of art from artists and hobbyists all over Wisconsin with different medias. For a free arts center I spent about an hour exploring. Add this to your list of Sheboygan visits.

    Photos
    John Michael Kohler Arts Center - Bathroom

    Bathroom

    John Michael Kohler Arts Center - Bathroom

    Bathroom

    John Michael Kohler Arts Center - Hmmm ... unusual?

    See all

    Hmmm ... unusual?

    Port Washington Light Station & Museum

    Port Washington Light Station & Museum

    5.0(3 reviews)
    34.2 mi

    We took the stairs up to the light station. There is a great view from the top. We took a quick…read morelook around and found a nice neighborhood surrounding it. I didn't know there was a museum until reading reviews. I assume the museum was closed when we went.

    There's a certain romance to a lighthouse that attracts people. This is a unique light station,…read moreit's more than a lighthouse. In most cases, there is a separate lighthouse and a lighthouse keeper's quarters. Here, the light tower was built on the top of the lighthouse keeper's quarters, making it just that much more convenient. Of course, being a lighthouse keeper was far from convenient. It was usually a lonely job, perfect for a solitary soul who liked isolation. It was a necessary job, warning ships away from dangerous shorelines, shoals, reefs and rocks, or welcoming ships into a safe harbor. Before the days of radar and later, GPS, the lighthouse was the only way to let mariners know they were nearing land. Many had foghorns to perform the same function when the light could not be seen. Lake Michigan was lined with lighthouses. Many remain, but most have long ago been decommissioned and extinguished. In fact, this lighthouse was decommissioned in 1903, after a pierhead light had been installed. The light tower was removed in 1934. No one knows whatever happened to that light and the 4th order Fresnel lens that guided ships into, or past, Port Washington. In 2000, the Port Washington Historical Society was presented with the light station. An ambitious project began to restore the light station to its former glory. When the Duchy of Luxembourg heard that the people of Port Washington were beginning the restoration, the Duchy offered to help. The people of Luxembourg were appreciative of the many descendents of Luxembourg emigrants who still lived in Ozaukee County, and grateful for the American army liberating Luxembourg in World War II. The Duchy built a duplicate of the old light tower and shipped it to Port Washington. The tower went up in 2002 as the restoration was nearing completion. The committee raised funds to have a reproduction of the 4th Order Beehive Fresnel Lens made, identical to the one that had originally been in the tower. It was installed in 2007. You will see all this when you take the tour! Volunteer guides will tell you the entire story of the Port Washington Light Station and invite you to climb the ladders to the light room. It's a spectacular view of Port Washington and Lake Michigan. Children under six are not allowed to climb to the light tower, and it is not for the faint of heart. The ladders are steep, and appropriate clothing and footwear is required. No flip-flops or mules are allowed and skirts are not recommended. No kilts, guys. The light station is open on weekends, May through October. Group tours can be arranged.

    Photos
    Port Washington Light Station & Museum
    Port Washington Light Station & Museum
    Port Washington Light Station & Museum

    See all

    Ten Chimneys

    Ten Chimneys

    4.5(17 reviews)
    20.9 mi

    I am obsessed with Ten Chimneys!!…read more The backstory is fascinating. This wonderful, glamorous Broadway couple found their way to the sweet little mid-west town of Genesee Depot is intriguing on it's own. Their summer home is lovely. I can feel the parties and good times that surely took place in years gone by. Everything has been lovingly preserved by those in charge and offer a wonderful glimpse into this adored couple's lives. The grounds are the perfect backdrop to the home. The entire estate gives off a quiet and relaxing vibe. It makes me understand why, on their time off, they would long to come home to Ten Chimneys. There were 2 tour times offered. Everyone takes a small bus from the starting point. A talented docent brings you on a detailed journey back in time and into the private world of Alfred Lunt and his wife Lynn Fontanne. Of course, there is a gift shop to visit after your tour. Be sure to check out the customer restrooms. The ladies room is glamorous with ladies finery and there is a huge King's throne in the mens room! Don't miss the walking tails if you want to take in a bit more nature!

    As a classic film and theater nerd, Ten Chimneys holds a special place in my heart. The former home…read moreof Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, the home and grounds are impeccable and just they was as they Lunts left them. Thanks to some love from investors, their stories are preserved and memorialized through the maintenance of Ten Chimneys and the many individuals from all over the world who come to this tiny Wisconsin town to remember them and Hollywood's days gone by. Cross the same threshold that the likes of Vivien Leigh, Helen Hayes, Lawrence Olivier, Katharine Hepburn, Noel Coward, Alexander Woolcott, and so many others crossed, as you become part of the storied list of visitors. Tours must be arranged in advance.

    Photos
    Ten Chimneys - Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in the Library at Ten Chimneys

    Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in the Library at Ten Chimneys

    Ten Chimneys
    Ten Chimneys - The ladies room sitting area.

    See all

    The ladies room sitting area.

    Grohmann Museum - Rooftop

    Grohmann Museum

    4.9(47 reviews)
    34.0 miEast Town

    What a nifty way to spend an afternoon. Provided that you're a vaguely cerebral (fair to say,…read more"nerdy") older sort, especially if you're a fella (I wouldn't recommend the place for most kids - especially not a gaggle of tween girls). All manner of The Work of Man memorialized in sculpture and painting, with a particularly nice Carl Spitzweg side gallery (worth a visit if you ever admired Norman Rockwell's "The Bookworm" - the original of which is also there, right outside the Spitzweg room - because you'll find its inspiration). Oh, and it's five bucks (I didn't even ask about the Senior Rate). And be careful not to trip over the students sunbathing on the grass in bikinis when looking at the magnificent sculptures in the rooftop garden.

    Been living in the neighborhood almost a year and never gave thia place a secons thought. Realizing…read moreit was right next door to one of my favorite coffeeshops (Discourse) and that it was only $5, I gave it a shot. This is one of the best kept secrets in Milwaukee, honestly. The artwork on display is incredible, with some genuinely masterful pieces, as well as more modern interpretations. Mostly paintings with some sculptures, iron work, and videos. They even have a rooftop which offers incredible views of the skyline and features several large sculptures, just bw aware that it's closed for winter. I took an hour and a half to get through it, and that's just taking a peak at the rooftop. I would say you could spend upwards of 2 hours here with little difficulty.

    Photos
    Grohmann Museum - Grohmann Museum  1000 Broadway, Milwaukee, WI

    Grohmann Museum 1000 Broadway, Milwaukee, WI

    Grohmann Museum - Various works

    Various works

    Grohmann Museum - Rooftop

    See all

    Rooftop

    Honey Acres - museums - Updated June 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...