Honey, discovered in Georgia in 2003, is about 5,500 years old, which is 20 centuries older than honey found in Egypt, previously considered the oldest. It was established that this is a product of beekeeping, not wild honey, which confirms the existence of a culture of beekeeping in Georgia since time immemorial.
As a result of climatic and geological natural processes, almost all types of soil found on earth were formed in Georgia. There is no such case in any other country.
Some scientists even call Georgia the Earth Soil Atlas. Therefore, there is no other country as rich in a variety of honey plants, as Georgia, which determines the unique organoleptic properties of Georgian honey.
The nectar of almost all melliferous plants is a medicinal agent, therefore Georgian honey and its products, along with nutritional value, have a wide range of medicinal properties.