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Possible low-effort, low-mess honey extraction idea.

11K views 28 replies 14 participants last post by  dave28210 
#1 · (Edited)
Reading over various crush and strain methods, I think I've come up with my own. It's probably half-baked and ill informed, but let's throw it out there and see if we can refine it:

1) Obtain a large stock pot, drill a hole in the side near the bottom, and install a metal water tap. I'm thinking the kind used on the exterior of houses used for garden houses.

2) Remove capped comb from frames, put in pot. I think such a pot would just about hold about 1 medium super's worth of comb.

3) Put lid on pot, place pot on a hot plate plate set to low, in the hot sun for a few hours. I believe the honey and wax should liquefy, and wax should float to the top.

4) Use the tap to fill mason jars with honey until honey runs out, and wax starts to flow out. Then start filling wax molds with the wax coming out.

When finished, just rinse the stockpot out, or throw in the dishwasher, and you're done.

What does everyone think of this idea?
 
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#4 ·
I briefly contemplated if it was possible to create one of these with a giant sized salad spinner. (Because I firmly believe that salad spinners are the greatest thing ever invented. I have one dedicated to spinning out hand washed laundry, yarn post dyeing and swim suits) Then I decided it was a horrid idea destin,ed to not only fail, but fail and make a big mess. When a process has been around for this long its really hard to come up with a better way to do it.
 
#7 ·
What if I sun-warm the honey to the point of liquefying
:scratch: :scratch: The honey in the comb is already a liquid unless your bees store honey cubes :D. I think you are way overthinking the "crush and strain process". Check out Michael Bush's site where he states he kept bees for 26 years without an extractor, he shows in detail his crush and strain method which looks very inexpensive and obviously time tested.
 
#8 ·
I harvest from cut comb foundation and crush and strain per Mike's method.

http://www.bushfarms.com/beesharvest.htm

I've got my own photo along side last year's harvest, but can't find it.

My buckets are food grade soy sauce containers from the local Chinese restaurant. I put a 2" plastic honey gate on the side at the bottom of the lower bucket and I use a couple of pieces of poly cutting board to keep the strainer and wax above the holes (Dennis Murrell).

I cut the comb free and let it drop from the frame directly into the bucket, break up the comb with chrome 5 gallon paint stirrer on a cordless drill, pour it into the "strainer" bucket and let gravity put it in the bottling bucket below over the next day. Then I let the liquid honey set for a couple more days so that the wax fines and bubbles "settle" to the top and jar through the gate valve. If you only count the time your fussing with the process, you spend only a fraction on what a spinning extractor consumes. Because gravity becomes your slave, the actual work goes unnoticed.

The honey coated wax can then be rinsed and strained giving the rinse water to the bees. Easier yet, leave the honey coated wax to the bees who will give it back clean and dry if it doesn't rain. The buckets are easy rinse and wipe in a utility tub and the rest goes through the dishwasher.

Compared to a $300 hand crank extractor, its near free and effortless.

Piece of cake and very little mess.

Yea yea, here it comes "All that wax could have been honey!" Not quite. The reported trade off is based on observation and poor evaluation and I'm not buying it especially since we can't figure out CCD after spending boatloads on research. Besides, beeswax candles can easily go for a buck or two with no containers, permitted kitchen, fear of contamination or inspections at your annual yard sale.
 
#9 ·
I harvest from cut comb foundation and crush and strain per Mike's method.

I've got my own photo along side last year's harvest, but can't find it.
No worries. I am familiar with Mr. Bush's process, and it appears great, but I am trying to think of a way I can further streamline the process by incorporating wax melting/harvesting into it, by using a metal, instead of plastic container.

I love your cordless drill suggestion, and I'll be doing that.

I like your other ideas, but have a few questions.

1) Regarding giving rinse water to the bees: Do you put it in a frame feeder? Inverted bucket? Does this not ferment?

2) Regarding giving honey-coated wax to bees: In what manner do you give it to them? Just drop the bits it over the frames? Put the bits in a bucket on top of the top bars and cover the bucket with a super? Is it not possible for them to re-use the wax to make new comb?
 
#11 ·
mrspock

Thanks for your questions. This communication shares with all and makes our world a smaller and happier place.

1) I use miller type hive top feeders that will accept the rinse, but I was too lazy with round one to put it on before it went moldy and down the drain.

2) Second round smaller batch I just put the sticky wax outside the hive on a pan and came back to dry wax that poured like crushed cornflakes.

The only time I noticed my bees scavenge wax was from the cut comb foundation I put in the super frames and even that was not excessive. I never saw any appreciable reclaim from burr comb, drone comb or any wax left outside the hive.

One of the benefits of harvesting honey is the avoidance of processing that many agree destroys health benefits that our friends have given us for thousands of years with their ready to eat perfectly preserved food. Even Draper's Super Bee Apiaries whose 15 minutes of glory includes supplying honey to the White House only warms their product enough to pass though a filter press. After I was pestered by a friend who found his spring allergies when near unnoticed after enjoying my honey, I refuse to heat mine.
 
#13 ·
If this is for me, as follows:

I started with a package as something to do with my boys and nearly lost it twice the first year. Elated with its survival the following spring, they threw a swarm and changed that. Two weeks later they did it again and I had enough. Much to the entertainment of the neighborhood I then had two hives. The following year I harvested 50# from the first hive, but didn't pay attention to the second thinking it was still building. No. 2 swarmed and gave me No. 3.

The honey was harvested as cut comb into plastic trays.

Hive #1, a polystyrene hive, went mean and I was glad to give it away because I wasn't confident in its strength. It's now in north central PA with an electric fence keeping the bears safe. The following year Nos. 2 & 3 swarmed and gave me #4 & #5. Believe it or not, I've tried a number of prevention measures.

The only thing that frosts me more than paying 200 bucks for a hive I didn't need in the first place is watching my treasured ladies up and leave me.

The novelty of cut comb didn't endure the inconvenience, but I couldn't balance the pile of honey you could buy at the farm market for the price of a decent extractor and the cheap ones didn't look like they would last long enough to pay for themselves. Plus it all looked like too much work.

The crush and strain is less work and mess than cut comb, costs near nothing and the buckets sit inside each other in the corner for the rest of the year.

This also has led me to my next adventure, top bar hives. Now those swarms only cost thirty bucks and I already have the perfect "extractor".

At six hives, a normal harvest could get me in trouble. Regulations are squeezing out small producers and I doubt I'm gonna make the leap. Mead?
 
#14 ·
My Grandma's brother ran about 70 hives. He produced a lot of comb honey in basswood boxes. His son told me that whenever someone wanted jar honey, his Mom would chunk combs in a large cakepan, and then put it in the oven on a low heat - just enough to melt the wax. Once all the wax had melted, they would allow it to cool, and then break the wax off the top, and pour off the honey.

You could do the same thing with a crockpot too.
 
#15 ·
A couple of quick observations....some of you must have a lot of free time on your hands and if honey production is your goal then crushing and staining is cutting into your bees production as they have to rebuild the comb every year. Giving your bees drawn comb will greatly increase your honey, however, I can understand this method if costs are a factor. Never could understand why a metal garbage can with a half horse motor on top should cost 1000 bucks. :scratch:
 
#21 ·
How big of a fire hazard is melting bee's wax in the oven or directly on the stove top anyway? I was always tought never to melt wax in anything other then a double boiler. I kind of like the idea of melting wax in a crock pot to get the excess honey out to feed back.. croc pots are cheap at the thrift store.
 
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