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What to do with old, dark brood comb

18K views 12 replies 10 participants last post by  hankstump 
#1 ·
Anyone use the wax from brood frames? What do you do with it?

I feel bad throwing it away, but I can't use the wax in body products because it was in the hive when I treated.

I've used it in candle making, but I don't find the medium/dark brown a nice color in most of the candle molds I have. I think a candle design with flowers on it shouldn't be made of wax that is brown. I've tried filtering it multiple times, using a maple syrup filter or a sweatshirt and it gets lighter, but it's still pretty brown.
 
#5 ·
I melt my old brood comb for wax. The cocoons soak up a lot of it and it needs to be pressed to get most all of it out. The wax does tend to be much darker, so I use it to paint on plastic foundation and wax the starter strips for my foundationless frames. I understand that brood comb can be melted in a solar wax melter and it comes out considerably lighter. Downloaded some plans to make one yesterday so i'll find out if it is true. I make candles out of the pale yellow wax from honeycomb and the drone burr comb that I always seem to get a lot of in the spring.
 
#7 ·
Hey JW. Some regular on here went to great pains designing/modifying a solar melter and posted his hints on here. I will be darned if I can remember who it was. At the time I thought, cool, but I will never need that. Well now I do. If I find it, I will let you know.
Larry09, I have found old brood comb not worth the trouble of messing with except to filter it once and pour it in ice cube trays. When I need to wax plastic foundation, a swarm box, hinges,dresser drawers,etc, I just use one of those cubes. K
 
#8 ·
Thank you for all the responses. I have been meaning to make a solar wax melter. A fellow beekeeper told me she made one really easily with a sheet of plexiglass and an old cooler. I've tried bleaching wax by leaving it out in the sun, but didn't have the best results. I live in Hawaii, though, so anything solar is great. We have an abundance of sun here.
 
#9 ·
There are several plans available for a real solar wax melter, and there are scads of videos of folks using an ice chest and a piece of glass. Here is the link to the Beesource version.
https://beesource.com/build-it-yourself/solar-wax-melter/
We have a lot of resources one does not see on the forums page. You have to go to the home page and click on the three bars in the upper left hand corner.
I am looking at this one and a larger one posted in the Beekeepers Workshop page.
 
#13 ·
Old black comb should be cycled out of your hive over time. Some give it 2 years in the brood chamber, some give it 5 years. Whichever, old black comb should be replaced over time. The built up cocoons from all the bees makes the cells smaller, and carry more disease and chemicals over time. It is actually the cocoons that wax moths are interested in, not the wax. Wax moths don't care for yellow comb so much as they love black comb.

Composting is my preferred method of disposing of old comb. If its buried, you don't get any wax moth larvae, and if you do, the rest of the compost community takes care of them.

Phil in Fremont.
 
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