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hfcs vs liquid sucrose vs invert liquid sucrose

9K views 15 replies 4 participants last post by  jean-marc 
#1 ·
O.K.

What is the difference? I have access to all three and the price is close. I know hfcs and invert sugar has long shelf life. The price on the liquid sucrose is a little cheaper. this is food plant reject because of color.
 
#5 ·
Rainesridge:

Ian is right. Look for HMF- Hydroxymethylfurfurals. I suspect levels in your sucurose will be high. Hmf increase as the temperature increases in either honey or syrup. If the colour is off in the sucrose it was possibly overheated, therefore it is darker. I don't know enough about the process to understand to explain what else could cause the off colour. I guess there is some sort of a bleaching process to get white sugar crystals as opposed to brown sugar.

HMF's are indigestible to bees I think, so it's deadly to bees if it is in their winter stores. In the spring it's not so bad as the bees can fly and void themselves.

Jean-Marc
 
#7 ·
bad link

I can not open the link you posted.

I will check the hmf levels. They have a lab onsite so I should be able to get This. My big concern was stability over time. They can invert the sucrose so it will not mold. I buy a tanker load of hfcs and use half in spring and half in fall. With a price of inverted sucrose as low as $.20 gal delivered I wanted to make sure it is good to last the summer.
 
#8 ·
I can not open the link you posted
Yes. It quit working for me, too. It was just a link to the search results obtained by an advanced search for 'HFCS' in posts here on BeeSource over the last month. Easy to do.

I will check the hmf levels. They have a lab onsite so I should be able to get This. My big concern was stability over time. They can invert the sucrose so it will not mold. I buy a tanker load of hfcs and use half in spring and half in fall. With a price of inverted sucrose as low as $.20 gal delivered I wanted to make sure it is good to last the summer
HMF is not the only problem. Process and residual acid is implicated, too. I would check with Diana Sammataro http://gears.tucson.ars.ag.gov/home/sammataro/index.html if in doubt.

I used HFCS and stored it over summer and winter, too, with no apparent problem, but a 10% or even 20% hit to the hives is not that easy to see. Minor ill effects are hard to spot. Not saying that is likely, but it never hurts to ask.

I actually still have a half tank that has been around for five years and it looks OK. I'm afraid to feed it tho'.
 
#9 ·
>>use half in spring and half in fall

Our guys say that might not be a good idea,

the HMF values in the surip increase with time, and temperature,
temperatures over 5 degrees.
They suggest keeping surip over winter is fine, here anyway, becasue it is mostly below freezing and not HMF degradation will happen.

With that in mind, feeding the left over surip in fall would pose a problem to your wintering bees. Depending on the type of winter you have I suppose,

Here, our winters are long and cold. We have to give our hives the best of feed to ensure good survival rates. But I am talking up to 5 months of confinement. Your situation might be different,
 
#11 ·
$.20 gallon, are you sure? That's less than 2 cents a pound delivered. Hard to believe, and almost to good to be true. I mean I pay about a penny a pound for delivery and I'm about 1 hour and 15 minutes away from the sugar plant and 10 minutes from the tanker truck yard. This a based on a full load. If it's not toxic grab it and don't hesitate before someone else does. I mean I've stored syrup over the summer, don't know if the increase of HMF's as Ian points out is harming my bees. I don't think so, but I have never measured.

Jean-Marc
 
#12 ·
>>don't know if the increase of HMF's as Ian points out is harming my bees.

To find out, you'd have to test your syrup.
I was at a entomological symposium in Winnipeg a couple of winters ago, and one of the honeybee topics was geared around feeding syrups to bees as a supplement to their diet. They talked mostly about sucrose and HFCS. One important point I left with , was how easily HFCS can degrade over time especially with higher temperatures.
It was mentioned syrup left over from spring, here in the prairies anyway, is better dumped in the bush than into your hives for winter feed,
 
#13 ·
The seriousness of the problem depends on time of year and what other food is available. If there is lots of other food, then the effect is diluted and also, bees live a shorter time when flows are on, HMF or no HMF, but add in some nosema, and you can just imagine the poor bees' stomaches!

The effect is worst when bees are confined and limited in resources.

Moreover, HMF goes up over time in honey and old honey can have high HMF, too. Heating honey raises HMF as well.

Time and temperature. Plus the nature of the original mix.
 
#15 ·
pricing

Sorry I missed typed that. It is $.20/lb not a gallon. Just want to make sure as hfcs is now $.24/lb delivered. on a full load that is a savings of $2000. But I would rather feed sucrose in the spring and hfcs in the fall. But if they use enzymes to invert the sucrose instead of acid and heat it may be stable for the summer. That is if I can keep it cool from what I hear you telling me?
 
#16 ·
From the bees point of view you want to feed sucrose in the fall and HFCS in the spring. You don't want to feed a bad batch of HFCS in the fall, too hard on the bees. Some of the oldtimers in Canada told me this years ago. If you get a bad batch in the spring the bees can sort of recover from it.

Jean-Marc
 
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