Tag: harvesting honey

  • Our First Honey Harvesting – Beekeeping 101 GF Video

    Our First Honey Harvesting – Beekeeping 101 GF Video

    Here is our first honey harvesting video where we show you how to use a comb knife and an extractor to extract the honey from the honeycomb.

    Our teacher, Jim, sent us an email after he saw our video with the following comments. Jim has strong opinions, like most beekeepers, I agree with most of what he says  here, but not all of it. Again we are beginner beekeepers, so we can and do make mistakes. my goal here is to show people that they too can raise bees. So here is Jim’s take on our first honey harvesting video.

    Offered in what I hope is noticed to be a TOUNGUE-IN-CHEEK and FRIENDLY

    tone, are the following comments from your peers, as summarized by me:

     

    1) Putting an undrawn frame of foundation into a hive in September is a dead

    give-away that not only did you fell asleep in class, but you also failed to

    do the reading. Bees are very unlikely to drawn comb after the middle of

    August. Much better to simply replace the extracted frames when you are

    done extracting.

    2) The “purpose of the smoker” is not to drive the bees down in between the

    frames. That level of smoke was last used by Richard Nixon against anti-war

    protestors. The purpose of the smoker is to simply block alarm pheromones

    from alarming other bees, and can be used sparingly.

    3) When you are fully suited, veiled, and gloved, the bees can fly around

    without endangering you. There is no reason to be concerned that they take

    flight when you are brushing them off frames.

    4) Brushing should be done with the frames upside down, so that any bees

    with their heads in cells will not be bent backwards or pulled apart. Cells

    slant upwards within the frame, so brushing from bottom of frame to top (by

    bushing with the frame upside down) is much easier on you and the bees. If

    your sound effect was the actual brushing, you also need to use much shorter

    strokes, so as to avoid “rolling” bees on the frame. A fume board and some

    Bee-Quick might have made the job quicker, easier, and sting-free, but I’m

    not going to shove specific choices at anyone.

    5) “Finding the queen” should not wait until frames are hanging on the frame

    rest, as the queen might fall outside the hive. One wants to inspect frames

    as one removes them, while holding them over the hive. The odds of the

    queen being on frames of honey are small, but they are non-zero.

    what do you all think? let us know here: