>>1064088>>1064089Solid plan. Other beekeepers have told me that honeybee drone larvae are sometimes requested by Vietnamese friends. They're larger than most bee larvae, easy frying. If you are ever pulling honey from a hive you could cut out the drone brood while you're in there and eat that. I would strongly advise against harvesting honey and brood from a feral beehive if you don't know what you're doing, as feral bees aren't used to working with people anymore and, region dependent, are possibly Africanized.
If I was bushcrafting I'd probably focus on hunting bees and catching their swarms to manage. They provide honey, larvae for snacking, wax, pollen "bread" (high in protein), propolis (a bee glue made of resin with medical properties), and friendship. There are ways to keep bees in logs, it would be far more practical than cutting open tree hives.