This video was just what I was looking for. I'm at the point where honey is strained but have a big ball o' wax n' honey left. Was trying to figure out how-to when I thought to check YT. Your video quickly solved the issue and I'm off to set up a double boiler with whatever pots will work. Thanks a bunch!
i know this is 2 yrs later, but when i get to that stage i wash it in a food grade bucket in cold water a bit more in volume than the ball of mush, gets your hands in there squeezing and tumbling then strain again with cheese cloth. The watery sweet washing can be fed to hive, but i pasturize it to kill any yeasts, about 70deg, and yeast it with a mead yeast. Make a few bottles honey mead.
They make paint strainers available at any Lowe's or Home Depot. They come closed at one end, and fit perfectly in a 5 gallon bucket. Find a wooden spatula. It won't alter the taste or damage the foundations.
Thanks heaps for your videos., youve done extraordinarily well. Can I give you a tip? When you use the video editor there is a function within it called "normalise sound" This makes all sound levels the same across the video. It will help to automatically amplify your voice, and decrease the music levels. Keep up your wonderful work. You're doing a great job.
Take the super off the hive in the dark, brush the bees off the frames into a box. Bees don't fly in the dark (although there are a few who don't read the book....). Nice easy way to avoid large numbers of flying bees and possible stings. If you have one, use a red light sat on a post nearby. The bees fly out of the box and back to the hive at dawn. Brilliant.
Hey Triple B, I love your videos. I'm a fairly new bee keeper and just now harvesting some honey from a hive. You method is a good way to do it. Thank you for what you do!
In Order to avoid slipping of the frames on the wooden foundation, Just Put a Nail From the buttom Side. And than place The honey frame in IT. You can than easily Flip the frame also.
I’ve been on the fence about getting a spinner but I see it just being a huge mess to clean up lol i don’t have bees yet but I plan on getting a few different types. I’m not into saving wax so I like the idea of the flow hive. I also want to get a regular hive too so I can get cut comb. It’s so satisfying watching honey being extracted lol
Love this! Thank you so much for sharing! I don't have my bees yet and currently purchase beeswax from a local farm . But when I do I can totally see doing this setup! ~jc
My very first harvest I used this method because I didn't have an extractor, but I must admit I cringed a bit watching you scrape all that wonderful comb into the bucket.
Your honey harvesting video has given me the info I needed for my first honey harvest. I want to make your double tub set up but I’m having trouble finding tubs that nest like yours. Where did you get them? Thanks for all your great info!!!
wash your ball of wax crush at the end in clean water in a polypail, put your arm in and squeeze all the bits and break them up, then strain again and save the water. Pasturize the honey water and make honey mead with it, you just need to get some mead starter yeast at a home brew shop and put the pail aside for a month or so, a new related hobby!. then the strained wax can be put on a black sheet of sloping metal ( lid cover off an old VCR player) on a couple bricks in an old super out in the sun under double glaze glass and it will melt and run clean into any container. Been doing this for years.
Question: I tried your method of getting the last bits of the honey off of the leftover comb, but ended up with a grainy, sticky hard goo. It seems like the wax and honey didn't separate and just hardened together. Any Ideas what I did wrong? I used the double boiler and made sure the mixture didn't boil. (It was only about 1.5" deep.)
Bite the bullet and buy an extractor. Honey-comb is a high-value item for the bees and should be treated like gold. My honey yields went up substantially when I went from crushing to extracting... (Just my opinion)
great info albeit I suggest using a wooden spatula rather than a metal one which can scrape off micro plastic pieces from the foundation into your honey!
Best way is a double boiler. A#10,gallon, can in a pot about2" larger with a riser under the can to allow bubbles to get out from under the can. Boil until all the wax is melted. Lift out the can and let it cool.
Your the first to say something about pasturizing the honey. My question is why? Is it mandated on your state? I'm new to bee keeping learning from all utubers and online class of sorts.
Great video. There is a beekeeper i live by that has over 200 hives and does the same thing. :-) At the end you say you keep it seperate from the raw honey, what do you do with the warmed honey versus raw honey ??
@@travismorgan9726 NO, Honey only spoils if it gets too much moisture in it.. or it is contaminated by something...most honey is pasteurized or heated before use... Heating up the honey just kills the good stuff in the honey. I like to keep it raw so i can use it for allergies.. you really don't need to separate it unless you want to.. ;-)
Hi 3B, curious how you clean/dry the frames after your scrape them down? I always find there is still some golden honey on the frame and I'd like to store them for next usage. Thanks
Instead of heating all that honey to at least 145 degrees F, why not invest in a honey press and squeeze it out of the wax? None of my customers would want to buy honey that has been heated. I'm glad you keep it separate from your raw honey!
I use a comb roller decapper and spinner and have hardly any wax come off my hives bees get them back and filled quicker. Once the spinner drains for a day there's hardly any honey in it and then I rinse it with real hot water and let it dry out. Crushing comb is a slow process in my opinion.
Great vid. Quick question, do you separate each super when extracting. Or do you tend to put all your honey into one tank? Or even maybe separate each hives honey? Thank you.
Salutare Bîzzzz Bîzzzz din ROMÂNIA ....IE MULT DE LUCRU CU MIEREA PÎNĂ AJUNGE ÎN BORCANE ,,CURATĂ ,, IE BINE CE FACI ,ŞI TE URMĂRESC CU MARE DRAG CUM TE DESCURCI PENTRU CĂ SÎNT CONȘTIENT CU TREBURILE ALBINĂRITULUI ......MULT SUCCES CU CEA CE FACI ŞI IE BINE PENTRU CEI ÎNCEPĂTORII CU ALBINE SĂ ŞTIE METODELE TALE ,,,,,
When the honey slaps against the sides of an extractor, it whips oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen(water, basically)into the honey. That alters the flavor. I prefer this way because it's not so violent of a process. If you DONT heat it, the wax just floats to the top. Scoop it off, and strain it again.
@@michellearmenta1116 it depends on the ambient temperature of the room. The warmer, the better. But typically, 24-48 hours should do it. I like to fill a jar with as much as will fill it, then remove the wax "scab" in the morning. Straining and filtering are two different things. What you remove can be strained again so nothing gets wasted. Or you can let the bees clean it up. That's not wasteful, either.
That picture of you with your tongue sticking out is terribly unflattering - if you sell or give away your honey, I would never eat because you gave the impression you licked it - you might want to reconsider this image of you
Bravo bravo👍, 100% zapečaćenoj svaka čast za rad i trud. 😀❤️
I love all your helpful hints and links for the DYI products.
thank you
This video was just what I was looking for. I'm at the point where honey is strained but have a big ball o' wax n' honey left. Was trying to figure out how-to when I thought to check YT. Your video quickly solved the issue and I'm off to set up a double boiler with whatever pots will work. Thanks a bunch!
i know this is 2 yrs later, but when i get to that stage i wash it in a food grade bucket in cold water a bit more in volume than the ball of mush, gets your hands in there squeezing and tumbling then strain again with cheese cloth.
The watery sweet washing can be fed to hive, but i pasturize it to kill any yeasts, about 70deg, and yeast it with a mead yeast. Make a few bottles honey mead.
They make paint strainers available at any Lowe's or Home Depot.
They come closed at one end, and fit perfectly in a 5 gallon bucket.
Find a wooden spatula. It won't alter the taste or damage the foundations.
Are the paint strainers safe for food ?
Thanks heaps for your videos., youve done extraordinarily well.
Can I give you a tip? When you use the video editor there is a function within it called "normalise sound" This makes all sound levels the same across the video. It will help to automatically amplify your voice, and decrease the music levels.
Keep up your wonderful work. You're doing a great job.
thanks for the tip and kind words...
All that beautiful honey... fun to watch.
Take the super off the hive in the dark, brush the bees off the frames into a box. Bees don't fly in the dark (although there are a few who don't read the book....). Nice easy way to avoid large numbers of flying bees and possible stings. If you have one, use a red light sat on a post nearby. The bees fly out of the box and back to the hive at dawn. Brilliant.
I do the same but direct in a paint strainer bag in the bee yard, and replace the frames back in the hive for them to clean it out
Thanks for the great tips!!
Thanks for sharing this. Happy New Year! :-)
Thank you! Happy New year to you too🎊👍🏻🎉🎈😊🐝
Nice...
Hey Triple B, I love your videos. I'm a fairly new bee keeper and just now harvesting some honey from a hive. You method is a good way to do it. Thank you for what you do!
Wow this is incredible to watch thank you!
Happy New Year!
Thank you!
Very nice video and explained very well 😊👍🏻🐝
In Order to avoid slipping of the frames on the wooden foundation, Just Put a Nail From the buttom Side. And than place The honey frame in IT. You can than easily Flip the frame also.
Nice video ilove yur❤
Recently used a 5 gallon paint strainer from Amazon for mine.
If you boil the honey doesn't that kill the enzymes? Sorry. I'm confused
I’ve been on the fence about getting a spinner but I see it just being a huge mess to clean up lol i don’t have bees yet but I plan on getting a few different types. I’m not into saving wax so I like the idea of the flow hive. I also want to get a regular hive too so I can get cut comb. It’s so satisfying watching honey being extracted lol
Love this! Thank you so much for sharing! I don't have my bees yet and currently purchase beeswax from a local farm . But when I do I can totally see doing this setup! ~jc
going to try your method have watched almost all you videos really enjoy happy new year looking forward to 2020
Thank you ! Keep us updated on how it turned out! Happy new year to you as well!!!
This didn't age very well.
My very first harvest I used this method because I didn't have an extractor, but I must admit I cringed a bit watching you scrape all that wonderful comb into the bucket.
Seems to be really informative video, Would be great if I could hear what you were saying.
Your honey harvesting video has given me the info I needed for my first honey harvest. I want to make your double tub set up but I’m having trouble finding tubs that nest like yours. Where did you get them? Thanks for all your great info!!!
wash your ball of wax crush at the end in clean water in a polypail, put your arm in and squeeze all the bits and break them up, then strain again and save the water. Pasturize the honey water and make honey mead with it, you just need to get some mead starter yeast at a home brew shop and put the pail aside for a month or so, a new related hobby!. then the strained wax can be put on a black sheet of sloping metal ( lid cover off an old VCR player) on a couple bricks in an old super out in the sun under double glaze glass and it will melt and run clean into any container. Been doing this for years.
Can you use the wax from uncapping for anything like candles?
You make it look so simple! I love your method! Just a concern though does honey loose some of it’s qualities when subjected to heating?
Question: I tried your method of getting the last bits of the honey off of the leftover comb, but ended up with a grainy, sticky hard goo. It seems like the wax and honey didn't separate and just hardened together. Any Ideas what I did wrong? I used the double boiler and made sure the mixture didn't boil. (It was only about 1.5" deep.)
Does your frames have wires?
Bite the bullet and buy an extractor. Honey-comb is a high-value item for the bees and should be treated like gold.
My honey yields went up substantially when I went from crushing to extracting... (Just my opinion)
A new paint strainer bag from hardware store for 5 gallon bucket is great. I don't think those totes are food grade. Perhaps I'll find some that are.
Do you link you can filter the honey to much? Thank you
What do you do with the frames afterwards?
Thsts s a nice honey bucket. You gonna share a link to get a honey bucket like yours?
It s been raining a lot here and the some has got into the top off the frames, would you recommend drying them thoroughly before extraction?
Are the frames plastic or drawn comb.
great info albeit I suggest using a wooden spatula rather than a metal one which can scrape off micro plastic pieces from the foundation into your honey!
There's a beekeeper BBC®️
Bees In The Pumping Set™️
Best way is a double boiler. A#10,gallon, can in a pot about2" larger with a riser under the can to allow bubbles to get out from under the can. Boil until all the wax is melted. Lift out the can and let it cool.
Check out paint socks for your straining sacks.
Any concerns with using non food grade bins? I know they usually have a chemical odor new from the store.
Your the first to say something about pasturizing the honey. My question is why? Is it mandated on your state? I'm new to bee keeping learning from all utubers and online class of sorts.
do you make the honey bucket? or you can buy it?
Great video. There is a beekeeper i live by that has over 200 hives and does the same thing. :-)
At the end you say you keep it seperate from the raw honey, what do you do with the warmed honey versus raw honey ??
I just like to use it first...or use it for cooking... my raw honey I like to keep for use for allergies and other uncooked treats...😊🐝
@@backyardbeebuilder5666 ok, thanks
Will the honey that you have heated up spoil? I still do not fully understand Wyatt must be separated.
@@travismorgan9726 NO, Honey only spoils if it gets too much moisture in it.. or it is contaminated by something...most honey is pasteurized or heated before use... Heating up the honey just kills the good stuff in the honey. I like to keep it raw so i can use it for allergies.. you really don't need to separate it unless you want to.. ;-)
Hi 3B, curious how you clean/dry the frames after your scrape them down? I always find there is still some golden honey on the frame and I'd like to store them for next usage. Thanks
leave it out for the bees, and they'll clean it up for you!
Instead of heating all that honey to at least 145 degrees F, why not invest in a honey press and squeeze it out of the wax? None of my customers would want to buy honey that has been heated. I'm glad you keep it separate from your raw honey!
I am wondering how long the process is to melt the wax from the honey in the double broiler? I am assuming it depends on how much wax you have. Thanks
Where did you purchase the squeeze bottles?
After straining honey must be reheated or it will crystallize.
Ֆ Honey Filter Ֆ
Your music is too loud as in parts of it we cant hear what your saying. good video thank you
If you put the wax back where the bees can get to it................will they take it and make a new comb with it????
I use a comb roller decapper and spinner and have hardly any wax come off my hives bees get them back and filled quicker. Once the spinner drains for a day there's hardly any honey in it and then I rinse it with real hot water and let it dry out. Crushing comb is a slow process in my opinion.
🐝
Great vid. Quick question, do you separate each super when extracting. Or do you tend to put all your honey into one tank? Or even maybe separate each hives honey? Thank you.
the volume won't turn up?
It would be great if the music wasn't so much louder than the voice.
Salutare Bîzzzz Bîzzzz din ROMÂNIA ....IE MULT DE LUCRU CU MIEREA PÎNĂ AJUNGE ÎN BORCANE ,,CURATĂ ,, IE BINE CE FACI ,ŞI TE URMĂRESC CU MARE DRAG CUM TE DESCURCI PENTRU CĂ SÎNT CONȘTIENT CU TREBURILE ALBINĂRITULUI ......MULT SUCCES CU CEA CE FACI ŞI IE BINE PENTRU CEI ÎNCEPĂTORII CU ALBINE SĂ ŞTIE METODELE TALE ,,,,,
THE HONEY CHEAP OF OXTAIL HONEY CHEAP BEES MEDIUM HONEY PATIO BEES FOR SNAKEMIXING®️
True waste of precious honey comb the most valuable resource as a beekeeper
When the honey slaps against the sides of an extractor, it whips oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen(water, basically)into the honey.
That alters the flavor.
I prefer this way because it's not so violent of a process.
If you DONT heat it, the wax just floats to the top.
Scoop it off, and strain it again.
How long will it take for the wax to float to the top if you DON'T heat it? Thanks for the tip!
@@michellearmenta1116 it depends on the ambient temperature of the room. The warmer, the better.
But typically, 24-48 hours should do it. I like to fill a jar with as much as will fill it, then remove the wax "scab" in the morning.
Straining and filtering are two different things. What you remove can be strained again so nothing gets wasted. Or you can let the bees clean it up. That's not wasteful, either.
How do you get the comb off when using foundation-less frames (with less gutting of the frames?) ?
Thanks.
Honey bucket. Are you hitting on me?
You say we can see how to make the strainer in another video, but which one?🤷🏻♀️
I could never waste all that drawn comb
music is too loud for people using ear plugs!
Would be much better without the music.
As far as i know exceeding 70 degrees C, destroys all the 'good' in honey...
I can't hear you!
check those audio levels. way too low for dialogue. (just trying to be helpful)
Sorry, I can't hear you.
That picture of you with your tongue sticking out is terribly unflattering - if you sell or give away your honey, I would never eat because you gave the impression you licked it - you might want to reconsider this image of you
How sad. Wasting all the hard work of your bees. That is a lot of energy lost. It takes six to seven pounds of honey to make one pound of wax.
Volume is awful!
The bees have to rebuild all of that comb back, why are you destroying it??