I was talking to a beekeeper at L.A. HONEY Co. years ago and he would throw his frames with wax moths in his chicken coup, he said that they did a great job.
When I get a dead out with active wax moth larva in it, I bring it over to the chickens and give them a buffet. Those are some tasty eggs afterwards. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
I was actually going to type this exact comment out recommending an oscillating tool with a smooth scraper blade made for linoleum. Harbor freight has some excellent options for battery powered models and high output batteries for field work with long life. If you were to use a hot water bath, would that do the same thing? With something to hold the frames under the surface, the wax should float, solids should sink, and any contaminants that remain in the wax can be removed after skimming. Just a thought. I was thinking of a grease interceptor in a restaurant and how it could streamline cleaning a large number of frames.
@@JeffHorchoff look into adding a grease interceptor into your system. It doesn’t need to be fancy and it can be homemade (I am/was a plumber) because it is simply a sealed vessel of water (at first) that uses reduced water flow to allow gravity to separate different density liquids and solids. It’s important that it stays vented so that you don’t cause a siphon by accident, and you will also have to make it easy to clean, so I recommend plastic. You need to have a flow restrictor as the water comes in that disperses the water sideways and down, and generally the first screens only filter through the top half of the water and there’s usually one perforated and one solid, the third screen is generally a solid screen that comes Halfway up the height of the tub and that can be perforated or solid, but that is on the bottom to keep the solids from filling all the way to the outflow. The 4th screen is always solid and goes 2/3 of the way to the bottom of the vessel from the top and you can have a short 5th wall that is just past the 5th if you want to catch any solid debris that gets past. The outflow will always come from under the water line, and should be at least half way down the vessel so that it always gets clean water without solids or grease/wax. Besides making sure that you never get wax down the drain, it should make future clean up easier
Hi Jeff! You made short work of those foundations and frames! It also looks like you've been doing some real organizing out there. I had not considered using the flush-cut oscillating saw, wow such a great tip! Nice hot-dip tank also... you seem to have all of the fun tools. Wishing you all the best this weekend and through the Christmas season! :) See you in January! Afterthought, have you considered using an air lance in your hot water kettle so the hot water gets moved around the frames?
Professor Fred, I hope one day you will be able to visit me at the abbey, and I'll give you free reign with all the cool tools I have access to. Who knows, maybe by the time you get here I'll even have an air lance to play with as well. I'm looking forward to seeing you in just a few weeks, till then, God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
Thanks for showing us the hot water cleaning method🎉 The frames look so pretty! I was thinking about using my large crawfish boiling pot but the wax may ruin it?? Or a #5 washtub instead? Any advice is welcome! Also, I hope you use ear plugs when you use the oscillating tool! Great video🎉 Isn’t it nice to finally have cool weather for the beekeeping tasks.
If you use your crawfish pot, there will be beeswax left behind. I highly recommend that any utensil that is used to melt beeswax be used ONLY for that as it will always have wax in it. Trust me, I will be wearing earplugs the next time. Thank you for your concern and for watching. Thank goodness for cooler weather, I can get some jobs done now. God's peace. Mr. Ed
You are going to love how good the tool works cleaning up the foundations. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my over 600 bee wrangling/ bee rescue adventure videos and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
Thank you for the idea for cleaning the frames! We modified the idea using a 10 gallon stainless pot over a turkey frier, dunk hem in for a few short minutes then turn them over for a few and you are done! Thanks for the great time saving idea!
I always love hearing how the methods I employ in my beekeeping can be helpful to someone else. I also appreciate how you modify the technique to suit your own personal style, awesome! Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Bruce. Mr. Ed
It’s amazing to me to see all the work that goes into bee keeping. I would never have known what goes on behind the scenes had you not been so generous with this info. Bee keeping is an art, you make it look easy. I pray you have continued success in all you put your hands to. God bless you.
Your blessings, kind words of encouragement, and the fact you watch so many of my videos is greatly appreciated, thank you very much for everything. Until the next one, God's peace Janet. Mr. Ed
I think it would do a great job as well. Unfortunately, I do not have one. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
We all feel the pinch of the cost of equipment which is why I'm cleaning my own frames. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Mr ed, I followed and watched ur videos for years. Yourself and the dirt rooster helped get me into bee keeping. I appreciate ur efforts in wrangling and bee keeping, please continue to share ur experiences with the rest of us. God bless
I would suggest looking at businesses that sell used commercial kitchen equipment, you would not want to buy a new one as they are VERY expensive. The one I have is manufactured by Vulcan. I hope this helps. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Gerald. Mr. Ed
The wax is self filtering, all the debris settles to the bottom of the water. I have lots of videos on rendering beeswax, and if you go to my channel, look under "rendering beeswax" in the playlist. God's peace Ray. Mr. Ed
Aw man! I’m just now seeing this video 😢. Just spent countless hours cleaning frames with a hive tool and a heat gun. Time to go to Harbor freight. Still have 30 more to do.
At least you did not finish the job and you will be ready for next years work. I love Harbor Freight. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Joe. Mr. Ed
I use both. The multi tool to scrape the wax off, and the pressure washer to clean up the foundation after the wax is off. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
I was really impressed how much easier it was to clean the frames using hot water. Nothing new about the method, but it was new for me and I wanted to share that. Thank you for your blessings and for watching early. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
The blade started out having teeth, but after doing so many frames, the wax filled in the gaps and the blade became a straight edge. Surprisingly, it worked just as good with the teeth as it did when it became a straight edge. You are going to love how quickly it cleans off the foundation. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
Yes it can be, and that's exactly what I did. Waste not, want not. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Doug. Mr. Ed
Good morning Jeff and thank you for adding greatly to my day! Watching you clean those frames makes me realize that one of these days there will no longer be any wax foundation in any of my hives. Happy holidays and God bless!
I started using wax foundations from the start and I loved them until I got an extractor and started blowing out comb. I have no regrets using plastic foundation. Thank you for your blessings and holiday wishes. God's peace Ken. Mr. Ed
Would dipping them in extremely hot to boiling water make it melt all the yuck off? Seems like it would be super easy that way. Have a blessed day, Mr. Ed.
The plastic foundations will deform if dipped into water over 175 degress. It's best to remove it and use the pressure washer to clean it. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
A few questions: do you do anything with the propolis that gets “melted” off? What happens next with the foundations? Also, when you render that wax, do the moth remnants get filtered out? (I’m assuming so, as other stuff does get filtered out). Glad you are getting cooler temps and finally got some rain. I lived in Slidell during several storms/ hurricanes and did a lot of sand bagging’! Don’t ever recall having a burn ban! (Was there from 4/01 to 11/02) Loved my time there but am happy back home in Michigan! Thanks & blessings to you!
I do nothing with propolis. With all the jobs I do already, I'm not interested in taking on another one. The plastic foundation will be pressure washed, video link below, as soon as I get a chance to do it. Yes, the cocoons from the wax moth are cleaned off the frame, either by the hot water or a scraping tool right after it comes out of the water. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
It will knock off webs, but not the really stuck on parts, that takes elbow grease and hot water to get that stuff off. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Gary. Mr. Ed
It will work for light stuff like webs, but for the more stubborn stuff, hot water and elbow grease is the solution. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Gary. Mr. Ed
I think it may work, but the frames would have to be placed into the fryer long ways instead of sideways. Also, if you use a fryer, know that there will be a wax coating in it after using it to clean the frames, and that may not be such a good idea. I strongly recommend having a pot JUST for cleaning frames.Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
There’s so much work involved with maintaining beehives and harvesting honey!! No wonder it’s so expensive!! So much hands on, manual labor in every step! Thanks for showing us the entire cycle!
I'm very happy to tell the story and share my experiences, thank you so much for taking the time to follow along. Until the next one, God's peace Cheryl. Mr. Ed
Rachael, thank you so much for becoming a member to my channel, your gift humbles me and I thank you for your generosity. The hot water really does a quick number on cleaning the frames with a lot less elbow grease. Delighted to see you taking advantage of one of your perks, early viewing of my videos. Again, thank you so much for your additional support. Until the next one, God's peace. Mr. Ed
I’ve watched several of ur videos before, im always trying to learn as much as possible. One person told me to use vinegar instead of bleach to clean boldly frames, have you ever used it? Which is ur favorite extractor you used? What are ur thoughts on using just one deep brood box? Using deep boxes for supers looks like it will be alot more work and harder on the back, is there any benefit of using deeps for supers?
There are many products that will work to help clean the frames, vinegar being one of them I think, but for me, straight up water works great. The video link below is a video I did on extractor comparisons, check it out. For my money, I'd pick the Hillco model. I use a double brood box and I'm VERY happy with that. Still, many folks use a singe brood box, it's up to you. For me the main benefit of using all deep supers is it's only one frame size and that make them interchangeable with my honey supers if I need to swap honey frames because the queen went up to the third box and laid, I also don't use excluders. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Possibly. I do like the idea of using an ultrasonic cleaner, but all I have is simply a kettle, and I have to say, it did a great job. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Josh. Mr. Ed
I am hoping to make a video on that one day. I know it would work just fine, but I have not gotten a steam generator large enough to get it to work well. Stay tuned, I will bee making that video. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Somebody told me to put some beach in the hot water. Or just plain water is fine? If ur cleaning any frames that have a little bit of mold, is that when you use bleach in water or just plain hot water?
Though I don't do it, using bleach to clean frames is a very common practice, and I have been told it works great in hot water as well. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
If you check out the below link, you will see exactly what I use my rendered wax for. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed ua-cam.com/video/2m3szKoqxzM/v-deo.html
I watched you do a comparison video on the extractors. I’ve always done medium supers for honey, but was wondering why some people use deeps, I think it will be too much work on my back to be lifting deeps all the time so I will stick to medium supers. I’ve always tried to do two deeps and sometimes deep and a medium for brood box, but I’m going to try to use a single deep and on some a double medium and then a queen excluder, I don’t mind if I get a little less honey but I think they will overwinter better in a single box, for some reason I can’t really get my colonies to be very strong going into winter. I fed them a lot for few months before the winter but didn’t seem they had too much food going into the winter. I’ll try to do sugar candy for them soon and see what happens this year. Do you do sugar candy for them and what ratio of water do you use for 10lb of sugar, in one video I’ve seen one person add I believe it was some white vinegar, he said it’s to help that the sugar candy doesn’t get mold. Do you know anything about that?
Everything depends on the environment the bees live in. Your method of keeping bees has to revolve around the conditions in your particular area. As I am not familiar with those conditions, it's best to find someone, possibly from a member of a bee club in your area, who can instruct you better than I can. One great thing about keeping bees is there are many consistent's as bee biology is always the same. However, because of variables in conditions, one's methodology has to consider those variables. Keep up your efforts and learn all you can, you will succeed. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Hello Mr Ed, muito boa tarde, aparelho interessante e inteligente de fazer a limpeza dos quadros,parabéns pelo vídeo, que DEUS abençoe. 🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝
I have seen videos on using steam to clean frames and it does work, and for that reason, I'm trying to make a video on the very same thing.Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Niki. Mr. Ed
First thing I thought of was fire and torching the moth leftovers lightly so they burn. I just remember an experiment with spider webs and fire in my life. Know nothing of wax moths, don't know if it would work or not.
All of my life I have had a fascination for fire, I just love it, and to see something burning is just so satisfying and cool. I think that very few guys feel differently....especially a country boy like me. And yes, it would work. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
The method you suggest would work nicely, but for me, the way I did it this time works great for me and I will be perfecting it as I go. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff yes the multi tool looks like it worked good! I do watch all your videos lol.. I'm on my 3rd year of beekeeping & I constantly watch all of yours & the other old pros on UA-cam for information & tips on how to do certain things.. I really love all your cut out & swarm trapping videos & how you do the double screen boards in springtime.
Good morning Mr.Ed, I have joined your membership. My wife said we just love you and can't wait till you and Mona come visit us. We enjoyed all your videos this year.
I can't thank you enough for becoming a member to my channel, thank you so much for your gift as well as the invitation to stay at the Applewood Farm for a few days. We both are looking forward to the visit with you and your wife and your bees as well. Don't forget, Mona and I both love our food with a lot of jalapeños so don't worry about making the food to hot for us. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
The video link below shows how I did it last year, and how I'll be doing it again this year. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
There are so many hats a beekeeper wears, and I guess being a barber will have to be another one! Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Mark. Mr. Ed
I can certainly see how the prospect of that work seems tedious compared to everything else you do, but it must feel very satisfying once it's done. Especially with you refining how you're doing it too. I look forward to seeing the wax rendering from it all.
For me, beekeeping is a lot more than just taking care of bees, it's the challenge, both good and bad, of dealing with the many faucets of all of it. Heck, that's what life is all about as well. God's peace Suzanne. Mr. Ed
One question... the blades on the power tool go dull really fast normally. Does it not matter for cutting off the nasty wax? Might be a good use for all the bad blades! Just need wider blades. And why clean off the propolis (other than the groove)? The next bees can utilize it, and will just replace it! (written as a truly lazy beekeeper!) Bless you brother.
I actually found when the blade gets clogged with wax, it worked just as good. This was especially true on the video from the removal of the bees from the RV a few weeks back. The blade was so full of wax and honey it was almost smooth and it still preformed fantastically. Since I want my frames as clean as possible, I want the propolis off as well. I think that's my ADD. See you in a few weeks brother. Thanks for your blessings and for watching. God's peace Tony. Mr. Ed
I made a tool to clean the grooves in the top and bottom bars from a paint can opener that most paint stores give you when you buy paint. I ground the hook portion to the width of the grooves. It works very well. enjoyed the video, and God bless.
Those time resolving tricks of days gone by may still bring forward simplicity Mr. Ed. 80 Degrees sounds really nice about right now. With your hot water bath technique, does that also eliminate not only moths or moth eggs, but does the processes rid any possible carryover of mites or other like pests from fall into spring? Already looking forward to the combined antics of you and Good Time Charlie! Hope you have a wonderful weekend! -Bob...
Ah no was just typing a comment when the fire started and when you said thats just the reminants of it the sily auto play went onto another video on some one else channel and my comment disappeared before I had even finnished it lol In a nut shell was saying how awesome that motrized hive tool is ans it would also be very useful on rescue jobs for cleaning up difficult to reach places after all the bees have been rescued. I will keep an eye on 628 Dirt Rooster channel and will let you know if he steals your idea hahaha Great video! Hope y'all have a great weekend! we have freezing temps here and snow forecast.
I saw the weather yesterday with all the snow that is up north, I am so happy I live in the deep south. Stay warm. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
All them frames must have been intimidating at first but look great now! The kettle and dremel did great! The boy scout rule I carry with me from childhood is to leave the (metaphorical) campsite cleaner than you found it. It keeps my wife very happy LOL!! Good luck with the wintering process. I wonder if youve seen the recent study about how modern beekeeping boxes stress bees unnecessarily during the winter.. any thoughts on that?
I just read the article yesterday, a monk gave it to me. I told the monk not to worry, the bees are just fine in their man made boxes. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Karen, thank you so very much for becoming a member to my channel, I am honored by your gift and the support it gives me. The tool really is a worker and I find new uses for it all the time. Again, thank you for becoming a member and until the next one, God's peace. Mr. Ed
Mr. ED Very helpful video I love how you do things simple. I have one last question on the honey wax separator i hope i am not making you bord by machine spification questions😢 You have told me that you start slow and when the capping balance you increase the speed. What is the minimum and maximum speed you use form your experience to separate your honey from the capping? thanks
I really do not know the RPM's of the rotation of the drum. That number may be found by goggling it. I'm sorry I can not be more helpful. Again, I begin the spinning very slowly and this allows the sludge to evenly distribute inside of the drum. Once the mass has all worked it's way to the edge of the drum, I gradually increase the RPM's working within the wobbles of the machine. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
I had never heard of this technique! Thank you so much for sharing! I’m going to give this a try. But quick question: I would need to use my canning pot that I use for pressure cooking. Does your big kettle get nasty from this process? I mean does it clean out or is your pot now coated in propolis and gunk? My kitchen stuff gets involved with the bees more than it should 😂
To answer your question, yes, there is ALWAYS a wax residue left behind every single time you work with beeswax and water. For that reason, I would not use my expensive kitchen utensils when doing this. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Well Jeff, you got me there. I thought for sure you were going to take the frames, duct tape them to the Abbee Honey Wagon, and then head to the local brush car wash for a good cleaning... :-) Another good video! Now how can I sneak a nice big boiler into the garage without Diane noticing... Hmmmm.... See you in a month! God Bless!!! -Jeff and Diane
Had an idea as you explained this, if you dump in the frames and used the box to hold them down it's a one shot deal. :D Thanks for sharing this video! Great info, God bless!
It took me a while to figure that out, but in the end, that's exactly what I did and it really sped up the process. Thank you for your blessings and for watching. Until the next one, God's peace. Mr. Ed
I tried straining it out but my method did not prove successful. I would have loved to have gotten the propolis, and there was so little wax it was not even worth trying. Thanks for watching. God's peace Mark. Mr. Ed
I do not harvest the propolis. I know I'm missing out, but it's a job I'm not interested in doing. Thank you for your blessings and for watching. Until the next one, God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
I can't thank you enough for becoming a member to my channel, your gift and support humble me. I know you are relatively new to my channel and I thank you for being a part of it. The bon fire has been going on for more than 20 years, and I'm all in for them to continue to do so. Glad to see you took advantage of the early showing of the video, I hope you liked the sneak peak. By the way, it would be nice to know your name so I can connect you better. Until the next one, God's peace. Mr. Ed
That's a really "cool" idea! I had some old frames and dipped them in a mixer of. Bleach and water. They cleaned up nicely. Now how do you clean you foundations? Great video. Thank you.
I have been told how effective adding bleach to the water is, and I will be doing it the next time I clean frames to find out for myself. The video link below shows how I clean the foundation which is my next job. Thanks for watching. God's peace Jon. Mr. Ed ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
Isn't that the truth, why struggle with something that just works when there is already a tool out there to get the job done correct and fast. Thanks for watching. God's peace Brett. Mr. Ed
You could adapt the multitool to have a flat plastic window cleaning tool end bolted on it to scrape out a whole frame in two swweeps but also not risk damaging anything?
I suppose you could but the problem is holding the frame in place while it is being washed. Also, high pressure would surely tear up the wood so you'd have to keep an eye out for that. Thanks for watching. God's peace Gene. Mr. Ed
I had a vision of something like an industrial dishwashing machine... Hang the frames on a rack (like the decapping tank) and a conveyor belt and it just Sprays hot water on them as they go through and the hot water/wax drains out the bottom.
As a new keeper i gues my turn will come. And im not looking forward to it. 😂😂 But. Thanx for the knowledge. Always learning from you. God bless u real good
The best part of being a beekeeper is the journey, the good and the bad. You are going to love it! Thank you for your blessings and for watching. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
Probably one if the more clever ways I've seen of removing wax from foundation... saw one guy that set all the boxes in the sun on a hot day, right next to some shade, let the boxes heat up in the sun, then took a putty knife and the wax just peeled off the froundations clean. You could also just go straight to the dip tank from the jump, as long as the water isnt too how to warp the foundations, but you have to control the fire so it doesnt scorch any slum gum or anything that sinks to the bottom.
I warped a lot of foundation and gave up on trying to melt the wax off of it. Now, I simply use a pressure washer and it does the job, video link below. Thanks for watching. God's peace Ivan. Mr. Ed ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
Shawn, thank you very much for becoming a member on my channel, you honor me with your gift and I am so very much appreciative of it. I saw the snow storm on the news this morning, be careful while driving, I saw 2 or 3 big rigs sliding on the road on the report. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
Putting frames in a solar wax melter works too, melts the wax and softens gunk in the grooves as well making them easy to clean and ready for fresh foundation... but don't put plastic foundation in the solar wax melter it will warp! Ask me how I know!!! MannLake has a frame cleaner tool HD616 that makes cleaning those top and bottom groves very easy once the wax is softened. Nothing nicer than fresh boxes of waxed foundation or boxes of clean frames and drawn comb to start off the spring season.
Depending on what type of device you use, tv, i phone, or android phone, there are different ways to join. By far the easiest way is using and android phone, the join button is directly below the video right next to the subscribe button. For an i phone and tv it is a bit more involved, and rather than confuse you more, go to UA-cam and pull up the videos showing how to become a member using the different ways. Thank you for your consideration in becoming a member, that is very kind of you and I do appreciate the extra support. Thanks for watching. God's peace James. Mr. Ed
Great idea, especially with how many you have to do! A average person with just a couple to do can probably use a old roaster pan if you only need a couple of inches of water. They can be bought for about $25. to $35 at a goodwill or other resale shop when not in season. Just like a old crock pot will melt down the wax. Guys, buy your wives new ones and you'll get to use the old ones, hahaha
After all, Christmas is just around the corner and you know she's dying for a new crock pot. Thanks for watching and suggesting good presents to get for our wives. God's peace. Mr. Ed
That is done with a pressure washer. The video link below shows that. Thanks for watching. God's peace Jake. Mr. Ed ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
I use it all, and I have a dozen videos showing how I clean it and what I use the rendered wax for. The link below is just one of them. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed ua-cam.com/video/i-Fhdy9R8o8/v-deo.html
I tried it, and it did work. Unfortunately, it also warped the foundation and did not do as good a job as when the foundation had been removed. Thanks for watching. God's peace Heather. Mr. Ed
I pull my wax moth frames and let my chickens have them. They love the moth and beetle larvae.
Our chickens get fat on the moth larva and drone brood regularly. Thanks for watching. God's peace Kevin.
Mr. Ed
I was talking to a beekeeper at L.A. HONEY Co. years ago and he would throw his frames with wax moths in his chicken coup, he said that they did a great job.
When I get a dead out with active wax moth larva in it, I bring it over to the chickens and give them a buffet. Those are some tasty eggs afterwards. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff
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No
I'm amazed at all the work that is involved to being a Bee 🐝 keeper. Thanks for sharing your information with the world 🌎.
Yes there is a lot of work, but more importantly, a lot of fun as well. Thanks for watching. God's peace Ray.
Mr. Ed
What a simple solution to cleaning the frames with hot water. No more hard scraping.
Wait till you try it for yourself and see just how easy it is. Thanks for watching. God's peace Bob.
Mr. Ed
I was actually going to type this exact comment out recommending an oscillating tool with a smooth scraper blade made for linoleum. Harbor freight has some excellent options for battery powered models and high output batteries for field work with long life.
If you were to use a hot water bath, would that do the same thing? With something to hold the frames under the surface, the wax should float, solids should sink, and any contaminants that remain in the wax can be removed after skimming. Just a thought. I was thinking of a grease interceptor in a restaurant and how it could streamline cleaning a large number of frames.
Eventually I will be trying steam, but that is in the future. Thanks for watching. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff look into adding a grease interceptor into your system. It doesn’t need to be fancy and it can be homemade (I am/was a plumber) because it is simply a sealed vessel of water (at first) that uses reduced water flow to allow gravity to separate different density liquids and solids. It’s important that it stays vented so that you don’t cause a siphon by accident, and you will also have to make it easy to clean, so I recommend plastic. You need to have a flow restrictor as the water comes in that disperses the water sideways and down, and generally the first screens only filter through the top half of the water and there’s usually one perforated and one solid, the third screen is generally a solid screen that comes Halfway up the height of the tub and that can be perforated or solid, but that is on the bottom to keep the solids from filling all the way to the outflow. The 4th screen is always solid and goes 2/3 of the way to the bottom of the vessel from the top and you can have a short 5th wall that is just past the 5th if you want to catch any solid debris that gets past. The outflow will always come from under the water line, and should be at least half way down the vessel so that it always gets clean water without solids or grease/wax. Besides making sure that you never get wax down the drain, it should make future clean up easier
Hi Jeff! You made short work of those foundations and frames! It also looks like you've been doing some real organizing out there. I had not considered using the flush-cut oscillating saw, wow such a great tip! Nice hot-dip tank also... you seem to have all of the fun tools. Wishing you all the best this weekend and through the Christmas season! :) See you in January! Afterthought, have you considered using an air lance in your hot water kettle so the hot water gets moved around the frames?
Professor Fred, I hope one day you will be able to visit me at the abbey, and I'll give you free reign with all the cool tools I have access to. Who knows, maybe by the time you get here I'll even have an air lance to play with as well. I'm looking forward to seeing you in just a few weeks, till then, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Thanks for showing us the hot water cleaning method🎉 The frames look so pretty! I was thinking about using my large crawfish boiling pot but the wax may ruin it?? Or a #5 washtub instead? Any advice is welcome! Also, I hope you use ear plugs when you use the oscillating tool! Great video🎉 Isn’t it nice to finally have cool weather for the beekeeping tasks.
If you use your crawfish pot, there will be beeswax left behind. I highly recommend that any utensil that is used to melt beeswax be used ONLY for that as it will always have wax in it. Trust me, I will be wearing earplugs the next time. Thank you for your concern and for watching. Thank goodness for cooler weather, I can get some jobs done now. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Oscillating tool is a great idea. I have wasted so much time and energy trying to clean up wax moth damaged frames.
You are going to love how good the tool works cleaning up the foundations. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my over 600 bee wrangling/ bee rescue adventure videos and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Thank you for the idea for cleaning the frames! We modified the idea using a 10 gallon stainless pot over a turkey frier, dunk hem in for a few short minutes then turn them over for a few and you are done! Thanks for the great time saving idea!
I always love hearing how the methods I employ in my beekeeping can be helpful to someone else. I also appreciate how you modify the technique to suit your own personal style, awesome! Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Bruce.
Mr. Ed
It’s amazing to me to see all the work that goes into bee keeping. I would never have known what goes on behind the scenes had you not been so generous with this info. Bee keeping is an art, you make it look easy. I pray you have continued success in all you put your hands to. God bless you.
Your blessings, kind words of encouragement, and the fact you watch so many of my videos is greatly appreciated, thank you very much for everything. Until the next one, God's peace Janet.
Mr. Ed
Wow that tool does a great job of cleaning.
Seems like a steam cleaner would make short work of that, would do boxes as well.
I think it would do a great job as well. Unfortunately, I do not have one. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
It would steralize too, what with a lot of illnes in bee's coming along.
The cost of equipment is outrageous thanks for ur videos.
We all feel the pinch of the cost of equipment which is why I'm cleaning my own frames. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Mr ed, I followed and watched ur videos for years. Yourself and the dirt rooster helped get me into bee keeping. I appreciate ur efforts in wrangling and bee keeping, please continue to share ur experiences with the rest of us. God bless
Where can one purchase the 30 gallon kettle set-up? Thanks
I would suggest looking at businesses that sell used commercial kitchen equipment, you would not want to buy a new one as they are VERY expensive. The one I have is manufactured by Vulcan. I hope this helps. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Gerald.
Mr. Ed
So when you melt all that wax down do you also filter all the Particles out of the wax.
The wax is self filtering, all the debris settles to the bottom of the water. I have lots of videos on rendering beeswax, and if you go to my channel, look under "rendering beeswax" in the playlist. God's peace Ray.
Mr. Ed
Aw man! I’m just now seeing this video 😢. Just spent countless hours cleaning frames with a hive tool and a heat gun. Time to go to Harbor freight. Still have 30 more to do.
At least you did not finish the job and you will be ready for next years work. I love Harbor Freight. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Joe.
Mr. Ed
Make sure if you go cordless that you check out the high output batteries made with 21700 cells. They have phenomenal performance
which is easier --- using the pressure washer on the plastic foundation or using the multi tool?
I use both. The multi tool to scrape the wax off, and the pressure washer to clean up the foundation after the wax is off. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Thank you Mr Ed for sharing methods of cleaning those nasty frames. Hot water does a great job of softening up everything. God Bless!!
I was really impressed how much easier it was to clean the frames using hot water. Nothing new about the method, but it was new for me and I wanted to share that. Thank you for your blessings and for watching early. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Is the blade for the oscillating tool just a knife edge with no teeth like a scraper? I need to do this to a few boxes that I have been putting off.
The blade started out having teeth, but after doing so many frames, the wax filled in the gaps and the blade became a straight edge. Surprisingly, it worked just as good with the teeth as it did when it became a straight edge. You are going to love how quickly it cleans off the foundation. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Can that wax be melted down with all the waste from the wax moths?
Yes it can be, and that's exactly what I did. Waste not, want not. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Doug.
Mr. Ed
Good morning Jeff and thank you for adding greatly to my day! Watching you clean those frames makes me realize that one of these days there will no longer be any wax foundation in any of my hives. Happy holidays and God bless!
I started using wax foundations from the start and I loved them until I got an extractor and started blowing out comb. I have no regrets using plastic foundation. Thank you for your blessings and holiday wishes. God's peace Ken.
Mr. Ed
Would dipping them in extremely hot to boiling water make it melt all the yuck off? Seems like it would be super easy that way. Have a blessed day, Mr. Ed.
The plastic foundations will deform if dipped into water over 175 degress. It's best to remove it and use the pressure washer to clean it. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
A few questions: do you do anything with the propolis that gets “melted” off? What happens next with the foundations? Also, when you render that wax, do the moth remnants get filtered out? (I’m assuming so, as other stuff does get filtered out). Glad you are getting cooler temps and finally got some rain. I lived in Slidell during several storms/ hurricanes and did a lot of sand bagging’! Don’t ever recall having a burn ban! (Was there from 4/01 to 11/02) Loved my time there but am happy back home in Michigan! Thanks & blessings to you!
I do nothing with propolis. With all the jobs I do already, I'm not interested in taking on another one. The plastic foundation will be pressure washed, video link below, as soon as I get a chance to do it. Yes, the cocoons from the wax moth are cleaned off the frame, either by the hot water or a scraping tool right after it comes out of the water. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
Jeff- not too experienced with plastic foundation here, but can't one just use a soft-bristled brush to brush those webs off?
It will knock off webs, but not the really stuck on parts, that takes elbow grease and hot water to get that stuff off. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Gary.
Mr. Ed
It will work for light stuff like webs, but for the more stubborn stuff, hot water and elbow grease is the solution. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Gary.
Mr. Ed
Would a turkey fryer work with water, or are the frames too big ?
I think it may work, but the frames would have to be placed into the fryer long ways instead of sideways. Also, if you use a fryer, know that there will be a wax coating in it after using it to clean the frames, and that may not be such a good idea. I strongly recommend having a pot JUST for cleaning frames.Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
There’s so much work involved with maintaining beehives and harvesting honey!! No wonder it’s so expensive!! So much hands on, manual labor in every step! Thanks for showing us the entire cycle!
I'm very happy to tell the story and share my experiences, thank you so much for taking the time to follow along. Until the next one, God's peace Cheryl.
Mr. Ed
Had a couple of dead-outs last year & thought they were bad to clean up but you win 🤣 glad I don't have as many as you to clean!!
Rachael, thank you so much for becoming a member to my channel, your gift humbles me and I thank you for your generosity. The hot water really does a quick number on cleaning the frames with a lot less elbow grease. Delighted to see you taking advantage of one of your perks, early viewing of my videos. Again, thank you so much for your additional support. Until the next one, God's peace.
Mr. Ed
I’ve watched several of ur videos before, im always trying to learn as much as possible. One person told me to use vinegar instead of bleach to clean boldly frames, have you ever used it? Which is ur favorite extractor you used? What are ur thoughts on using just one deep brood box? Using deep boxes for supers looks like it will be alot more work and harder on the back, is there any benefit of using deeps for supers?
There are many products that will work to help clean the frames, vinegar being one of them I think, but for me, straight up water works great. The video link below is a video I did on extractor comparisons, check it out. For my money, I'd pick the Hillco model. I use a double brood box and I'm VERY happy with that. Still, many folks use a singe brood box, it's up to you. For me the main benefit of using all deep supers is it's only one frame size and that make them interchangeable with my honey supers if I need to swap honey frames because the queen went up to the third box and laid, I also don't use excluders. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
I wonder if one of the heated ultrasonic cleaners would work?
Possibly. I do like the idea of using an ultrasonic cleaner, but all I have is simply a kettle, and I have to say, it did a great job. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Josh.
Mr. Ed
Why not use steam on those boxes and frames, clean them in a machine...
I am hoping to make a video on that one day. I know it would work just fine, but I have not gotten a steam generator large enough to get it to work well. Stay tuned, I will bee making that video. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Somebody told me to put some beach in the hot water. Or just plain water is fine? If ur cleaning any frames that have a little bit of mold, is that when you use bleach in water or just plain hot water?
Though I don't do it, using bleach to clean frames is a very common practice, and I have been told it works great in hot water as well. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Enjoy your content, American watching from Norway
Thank you Roger, and don't forget, I post a new video every Friday. Stay warm over there. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
That’s a big job! Glad you figured it out to make it easier to do!
For most hobbyists not really, but with 150 hives it is a job. Thanks for watching. God's peace Lori Anne.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff thank you Mr. Ed ❤️
What u do with old wax?
If you check out the below link, you will see exactly what I use my rendered wax for. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
ua-cam.com/video/2m3szKoqxzM/v-deo.html
I watched you do a comparison video on the extractors. I’ve always done medium supers for honey, but was wondering why some people use deeps, I think it will be too much work on my back to be lifting deeps all the time so I will stick to medium supers. I’ve always tried to do two deeps and sometimes deep and a medium for brood box, but I’m going to try to use a single deep and on some a double medium and then a queen excluder, I don’t mind if I get a little less honey but I think they will overwinter better in a single box, for some reason I can’t really get my colonies to be very strong going into winter. I fed them a lot for few months before the winter but didn’t seem they had too much food going into the winter. I’ll try to do sugar candy for them soon and see what happens this year. Do you do sugar candy for them and what ratio of water do you use for 10lb of sugar, in one video I’ve seen one person add I believe it was some white vinegar, he said it’s to help that the sugar candy doesn’t get mold. Do you know anything about that?
Everything depends on the environment the bees live in. Your method of keeping bees has to revolve around the conditions in your particular area. As I am not familiar with those conditions, it's best to find someone, possibly from a member of a bee club in your area, who can instruct you better than I can. One great thing about keeping bees is there are many consistent's as bee biology is always the same. However, because of variables in conditions, one's methodology has to consider those variables. Keep up your efforts and learn all you can, you will succeed. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Hello Mr Ed, muito boa tarde, aparelho interessante e inteligente de fazer a limpeza dos quadros,parabéns pelo vídeo, que DEUS abençoe. 🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝
I‘m not a Beekeeper but did anyone try steam cleaning these?
I have seen videos on using steam to clean frames and it does work, and for that reason, I'm trying to make a video on the very same thing.Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Niki.
Mr. Ed
First thing I thought of was fire and torching the moth leftovers lightly so they burn. I just remember an experiment with spider webs and fire in my life. Know nothing of wax moths, don't know if it would work or not.
All of my life I have had a fascination for fire, I just love it, and to see something burning is just so satisfying and cool. I think that very few guys feel differently....especially a country boy like me. And yes, it would work. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
U should just pull the bad foundations & get nylon brush rollers or something on a drum sander, u would even have dust collection hookup
The method you suggest would work nicely, but for me, the way I did it this time works great for me and I will be perfecting it as I go. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff yes the multi tool looks like it worked good! I do watch all your videos lol.. I'm on my 3rd year of beekeeping & I constantly watch all of yours & the other old pros on UA-cam for information & tips on how to do certain things.. I really love all your cut out & swarm trapping videos & how you do the double screen boards in springtime.
Good morning Mr.Ed, I have joined your membership. My wife said we just love you and can't wait till you and Mona come visit us. We enjoyed all your videos this year.
I can't thank you enough for becoming a member to my channel, thank you so much for your gift as well as the invitation to stay at the Applewood Farm for a few days. We both are looking forward to the visit with you and your wife and your bees as well. Don't forget, Mona and I both love our food with a lot of jalapeños so don't worry about making the food to hot for us. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
how do you clean the foundation?
The video link below shows how I did it last year, and how I'll be doing it again this year. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
So you are a bee barber now too :)
There are so many hats a beekeeper wears, and I guess being a barber will have to be another one! Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Mark.
Mr. Ed
I'd be wearing hearing protection with that noisy little tool. Or just go direct to hot water.
I can certainly see how the prospect of that work seems tedious compared to everything else you do, but it must feel very satisfying once it's done. Especially with you refining how you're doing it too. I look forward to seeing the wax rendering from it all.
For me, beekeeping is a lot more than just taking care of bees, it's the challenge, both good and bad, of dealing with the many faucets of all of it. Heck, that's what life is all about as well. God's peace Suzanne.
Mr. Ed
Jeff,
Thanks for sharing this time saving approach. It is so helpful to have these insights from you. ThankYou Kindly.
You are very welcome, I hope you can use the idea to make the job easier. Thanks for watching. God's peace Ted.
Mr. Ed
Very nice looks easy. I am about to clean a bunch of boxes of old boxes and comb. Shared your video with my club.
Thanks for doing that Shawn, and I hope it helps a few folks. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
One question... the blades on the power tool go dull really fast normally. Does it not matter for cutting off the nasty wax? Might be a good use for all the bad blades! Just need wider blades. And why clean off the propolis (other than the groove)? The next bees can utilize it, and will just replace it! (written as a truly lazy beekeeper!) Bless you brother.
Those blades are easy to sharpen. Sometimes its as easy as a few 1/8 nicks with a hack saw blade.
I actually found when the blade gets clogged with wax, it worked just as good. This was especially true on the video from the removal of the bees from the RV a few weeks back. The blade was so full of wax and honey it was almost smooth and it still preformed fantastically. Since I want my frames as clean as possible, I want the propolis off as well. I think that's my ADD. See you in a few weeks brother. Thanks for your blessings and for watching. God's peace Tony.
Mr. Ed
I learned another trick on cleaning frames .This was great and Thank you so much for sharing Jeff.Im sure ill see you up here in KY in January.
I made a tool to clean the grooves in the top and bottom bars from a paint can opener that most paint stores give you when you buy paint. I ground the hook portion to the width of the grooves. It works very well. enjoyed the video, and God bless.
Those time resolving tricks of days gone by may still bring forward simplicity Mr. Ed. 80 Degrees sounds really nice about right now. With your hot water bath technique, does that also eliminate not only moths or moth eggs, but does the processes rid any possible carryover of mites or other like pests from fall into spring? Already looking forward to the combined antics of you and Good Time Charlie! Hope you have a wonderful weekend! -Bob...
Trust me, nothing survives boiling water. Thanks for watching. God's peace Bob.
Mr. Ed
You’re a genius. I had two dead out and it laborious to clean last month. You have given me so many new techniques to use.
Hot water will warp the frames bad. Not really the frames but the plastic comb. Steam cleaner would melt the hell out of them
He didn't put the plastic foundation in the water
Work smarter, not harder. Great job, Jeff!
Words of wisdom! Thanks for watching. God's peace Timothy.
Mr. Ed
Mr. Ed: Frame Barber 💈
I use a wash tub on a propane burner. Works great. Thanks for the reminder I need to get cleaning.
Great Idea, I have been putting off cleaning some frames but its time to get busy, thanks Mr. ED.
It's hard to believe it's time already, get busy brother. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Ah no was just typing a comment when the fire started and when you said thats just the reminants of it the sily auto play went onto another video on some one else channel and my comment disappeared before I had even finnished it lol In a nut shell was saying how awesome that motrized hive tool is ans it would also be very useful on rescue jobs for cleaning up difficult to reach places after all the bees have been rescued. I will keep an eye on 628 Dirt Rooster channel and will let you know if he steals your idea hahaha Great video! Hope y'all have a great weekend! we have freezing temps here and snow forecast.
I saw the weather yesterday with all the snow that is up north, I am so happy I live in the deep south. Stay warm. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Awesome job god bless❤
Yes Beekeeping never ending winter in prepare hives and frames .
Thank you 🐝🐝🐝
A beekeepers job never ends, but that's the joy of beeing one. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Bold opening shot with that fire! Love the videos!
All them frames must have been intimidating at first but look great now! The kettle and dremel did great! The boy scout rule I carry with me from childhood is to leave the (metaphorical) campsite cleaner than you found it. It keeps my wife very happy LOL!!
Good luck with the wintering process. I wonder if youve seen the recent study about how modern beekeeping boxes stress bees unnecessarily during the winter.. any thoughts on that?
I just read the article yesterday, a monk gave it to me. I told the monk not to worry, the bees are just fine in their man made boxes. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Even watching you doing this "housekeeping" chore is interesting! 🐝
what a great idea. I buying this today and yea I hate scraping wax. thanks dude.
Happy to help....just not to do the work for you. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Hi mr Ed
Mug up from central NH where it is 25 f at 7:17 am It's going to be a great day! Hot water and a multi-tool indeed!
Two tools every beekeeper should be utilizing! God's peace Brice.
Mr. Ed
Mr. Ed likes his Fein tool. It's amazing what they can be used for.
Karen, thank you so very much for becoming a member to my channel, I am honored by your gift and the support it gives me. The tool really is a worker and I find new uses for it all the time. Again, thank you for becoming a member and until the next one, God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Awesome idea!!! Thanks Jeff!
I'd say it was worth a honey bottle label. Thank you brother. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Mr. ED
Very helpful video
I love how you do things simple.
I have one last question on the honey wax separator i hope i am not making you bord by machine spification questions😢
You have told me that you start slow and when the capping balance you increase the speed.
What is the minimum and maximum speed you use form your experience to separate your honey from the capping?
thanks
What about answer for my question Mr ED
Thanks
I really do not know the RPM's of the rotation of the drum. That number may be found by goggling it. I'm sorry I can not be more helpful. Again, I begin the spinning very slowly and this allows the sludge to evenly distribute inside of the drum. Once the mass has all worked it's way to the edge of the drum, I gradually increase the RPM's working within the wobbles of the machine. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
That hive tool looks exactly like the paint scrapers I used in the Navy.
That's probably where they got the design from. That tool has been around forever. Thanks for watching. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Great tip to make your life easier 👍 God’s peace, Mr Ed🙏😊💕🤗
I have some really old frames from the original used hives I bought. Some of those frames have a waxy feel to them. Now I know why. Thanks.
I had never heard of this technique! Thank you so much for sharing! I’m going to give this a try. But quick question: I would need to use my canning pot that I use for pressure cooking. Does your big kettle get nasty from this process? I mean does it clean out or is your pot now coated in propolis and gunk? My kitchen stuff gets involved with the bees more than it should 😂
To answer your question, yes, there is ALWAYS a wax residue left behind every single time you work with beeswax and water. For that reason, I would not use my expensive kitchen utensils when doing this. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Well Jeff, you got me there. I thought for sure you were going to take the frames, duct tape them to the Abbee Honey Wagon, and then head to the local brush car wash for a good cleaning... :-) Another good video! Now how can I sneak a nice big boiler into the garage without Diane noticing... Hmmmm.... See you in a month! God Bless!!! -Jeff and Diane
Looking forward to seeing you guys as well, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Had an idea as you explained this, if you dump in the frames and used the box to hold them down it's a one shot deal. :D Thanks for sharing this video! Great info, God bless!
It took me a while to figure that out, but in the end, that's exactly what I did and it really sped up the process. Thank you for your blessings and for watching. Until the next one, God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Awesome advice wandering about the water with wax and propels. What you do with that.
I tried straining it out but my method did not prove successful. I would have loved to have gotten the propolis, and there was so little wax it was not even worth trying. Thanks for watching. God's peace Mark.
Mr. Ed
good way to do it mr ed god bless
So happy you have become a member Terry, thank you so much for your gift and support. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
I’ll be flying over again this afternoon, I’ll waggle the wings for ya. 🤣👍 Gods peace.
I'll bee looking for you! Thank you for your blessings and for watching. God's peace Brian.
Mr. Ed
Enjoyed the video. Like to see how you clean the foundation more.
I'll be showing the foundation cleaning and dipping in a video very soon, stay tuned. Thanks for watching. God's peace Kristine.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff Thank you for the reply, that's great to know I'll keep watching. And God's peace to you and yours as well.
Hi Mr Ed. Always entertaining and informative. You do not harvest propolis? Blessings.
I do not harvest the propolis. I know I'm missing out, but it's a job I'm not interested in doing. Thank you for your blessings and for watching. Until the next one, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Will you be doing a video on preparing the foundations?
Yes I will, stay tuned. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
boiling and baking sanitize things in them there old days ... lol. nice bond fire i am so glad they got to keep tradition alive and well.
I can't thank you enough for becoming a member to my channel, your gift and support humble me. I know you are relatively new to my channel and I thank you for being a part of it. The bon fire has been going on for more than 20 years, and I'm all in for them to continue to do so. Glad to see you took advantage of the early showing of the video, I hope you liked the sneak peak. By the way, it would be nice to know your name so I can connect you better. Until the next one, God's peace. Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff Mr. Ed I am Nancy I shall some day get off my lazy caboose and write you an email and tell you why I started learning about bees.
That's a really "cool" idea! I had some old frames and dipped them in a mixer of. Bleach and water. They cleaned up nicely. Now how do you clean you foundations? Great video. Thank you.
I have been told how effective adding bleach to the water is, and I will be doing it the next time I clean frames to find out for myself. The video link below shows how I clean the foundation which is my next job. Thanks for watching. God's peace Jon.
Mr. Ed
ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
choice of tools is everything. Work smarter, not harder.
Isn't that the truth, why struggle with something that just works when there is already a tool out there to get the job done correct and fast. Thanks for watching. God's peace Brett.
Mr. Ed
You could adapt the multitool to have a flat plastic window cleaning tool end bolted on it to scrape out a whole frame in two swweeps but also not risk damaging anything?
Good idea, but using the wide blade works really well and I did not have to adapt anything else. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Jeff, could you use a high pressure water washer, at a very low pressure.
I suppose you could but the problem is holding the frame in place while it is being washed. Also, high pressure would surely tear up the wood so you'd have to keep an eye out for that. Thanks for watching. God's peace Gene.
Mr. Ed
I had a vision of something like an industrial dishwashing machine... Hang the frames on a rack (like the decapping tank) and a conveyor belt and it just Sprays hot water on them as they go through and the hot water/wax drains out the bottom.
Commercial guys probably have something like that, they have all the really nice toys. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
It looks like sheep shearing.
It certainly does. Great hearing from you again, it's been a while. Until the next one, God's peace.
Mr. Ed
As a new keeper i gues my turn will come. And im not looking forward to it. 😂😂 But. Thanx for the knowledge. Always learning from you. God bless u real good
The best part of being a beekeeper is the journey, the good and the bad. You are going to love it! Thank you for your blessings and for watching. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff thanx Jeff. And yes. It is so rewarding.
Probably one if the more clever ways I've seen of removing wax from foundation... saw one guy that set all the boxes in the sun on a hot day, right next to some shade, let the boxes heat up in the sun, then took a putty knife and the wax just peeled off the froundations clean. You could also just go straight to the dip tank from the jump, as long as the water isnt too how to warp the foundations, but you have to control the fire so it doesnt scorch any slum gum or anything that sinks to the bottom.
I warped a lot of foundation and gave up on trying to melt the wax off of it. Now, I simply use a pressure washer and it does the job, video link below. Thanks for watching. God's peace Ivan.
Mr. Ed
ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
Whoops! I asked about reusing the wax too soon.
I loved this video Jeff
Good morning Mr. Ed from the frozen tundra of Ohio.
Shawn, thank you very much for becoming a member on my channel, you honor me with your gift and I am so very much appreciative of it. I saw the snow storm on the news this morning, be careful while driving, I saw 2 or 3 big rigs sliding on the road on the report. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
You should plant some basswood. It is a tree native to Louisiana and has a nickname of Bee Tree 😁
Thank you for the suggestion, I will look into that. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Putting frames in a solar wax melter works too, melts the wax and softens gunk in the grooves as well making them easy to clean and ready for fresh foundation... but don't put plastic foundation in the solar wax melter it will warp! Ask me how I know!!! MannLake has a frame cleaner tool HD616 that makes cleaning those top and bottom groves very easy once the wax is softened. Nothing nicer than fresh boxes of waxed foundation or boxes of clean frames and drawn comb to start off the spring season.
I have one of the Mann Lake tools, but I still prefer the screwdriver, it hurts my hand less. Thanks for watching. God's mpeace Nancy.
Mr. Ed
Can you post a member link so I can become one?
May Our Lord bless you in all ways
Depending on what type of device you use, tv, i phone, or android phone, there are different ways to join. By far the easiest way is using and android phone, the join button is directly below the video right next to the subscribe button. For an i phone and tv it is a bit more involved, and rather than confuse you more, go to UA-cam and pull up the videos showing how to become a member using the different ways. Thank you for your consideration in becoming a member, that is very kind of you and I do appreciate the extra support. Thanks for watching. God's peace James.
Mr. Ed
I use a torch
I've used one in the past and it does work, but this way for me works way better. Thanks for watching. God's peace Becky.
Mr. Ed
Yes as a beekeeper myself it is a lot of work
This really does help and I recommend trying it for yourself. Thanks for watching. God's peace John.
Mr. Ed
I sure will I always watch your videos thank you Mr. Ed
Great idea, especially with how many you have to do! A average person with just a couple to do can probably use a old roaster pan if you only need a couple of inches of water. They can be bought for about $25. to $35 at a goodwill or other resale shop when not in season. Just like a old crock pot will melt down the wax. Guys, buy your wives new ones and you'll get to use the old ones, hahaha
After all, Christmas is just around the corner and you know she's dying for a new crock pot. Thanks for watching and suggesting good presents to get for our wives. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
What is a dead out?
A bee hive that the bees have either left or the bees died in it. Thanks for watching and asking. God's peace David.
Mr. Ed
how do you clean the plastic foundation? God bless.
That is done with a pressure washer. The video link below shows that. Thanks for watching. God's peace Jake.
Mr. Ed
ua-cam.com/video/ApZWa-Kljts/v-deo.html
Can the old wax you scraped up be used?
I use it all, and I have a dozen videos showing how I clean it and what I use the rendered wax for. The link below is just one of them. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
ua-cam.com/video/i-Fhdy9R8o8/v-deo.html
Could you do the whole frame plastic foundation and all in the boiling water?
I tried it, and it did work. Unfortunately, it also warped the foundation and did not do as good a job as when the foundation had been removed. Thanks for watching. God's peace Heather.
Mr. Ed