Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Let the Honey Flow!

Hello, Beelicious Readers!

Our bees were pretty busy this last month making some serious honey in the honey super. We hadn't thought our girls would have enough honey to share with us this year as it's the first year in their home. We wanted to make sure they had plenty to eat over Winter before we took any honey from them. Well, the girls made a bunch of honey and we were able to take some of the surplus. How did it go? Well, let's get started!

We had a big harvesting day at Tim's. Tim had 5 honey supers to harvest, plus he had two friends come by to harvest their boxes as well. We spent over three hours uncapping the frames, testing the honey using a refractometer, loading and unloading the honey extractor and changing out the buckets for bottling. 

Our uncapping station
Honey extractor

Stack of boxes of empty frames

I love Tim's new art on his hive boxes. I created a "Tim Bee" for his honey labels. One of his friends is an artist and took the bee I made and put them all over his boxes. They are really cute!

Super cute, right?

After everyone took their honey and left, Tim, Al and I got my honey super off of my hive and brought it into the garage. There were a lot of bees around with the smell of honey in the air so we decided to harvest inside the garage. We put it on the table so I could check the individual frames before harvesting. 

Once I pulled out each frame to inspect them, each frame was full of honey, but only about 50% of them were capped. Once the bees cap each cell of a honey frame, you can bet that the moisture level of that honey is around 18%. You definitely don't want honey with a moisture level over 20% or it's on its way to fermenting. So instead of bottling directly from the hive, we decided to let the honey flow into a bucket so we could measure the moisture content before we bottled it. 

So how did it go? Well, check it out!




And, as promised, full disclosure, the flow frames leaked. A lot. We only opened two frames and the honey was leaking onto the table like crazy. We decided to close the frames so that I could take it home to make a mess in my own house. After discussing this issue with the Flow people and other beekeepers who use this harvesting method, it was discovered that when the bees do not cap the cells you are opening with the hive key, honey will leak over the sides of the cells and down the frame, which creates the puddles of honey underneath. The second harvest is generally much smoother as the bees seal them better as well. Next season, it should be better, so stay tuned...

What to do with a honey super you don't want making a mess on your kitchen counter? Put a dish rack tray underneath it! GENIUS! So we have a dish rack tray that has a hole which allows the water to drain toward your sink. I just used this methodology to let the honey flow into a bucket so we didn't lose any of it. You know what? It worked like a charm! Let's watch together! 





Ok, how cool is that?! We ended up testing each frame of honey with our refractometer and our honey was at 18.3% and absolutely delicious! The girls just hadn't had a chance to cap it. They did such a great job! It was incredibly exciting to finally be able to bottle our very first jar of our girls' honey. Being a beekeeper is so dang cool!

Once our bucket was full, I bottled all of our honey and we were able to harvest 29 pounds! It was a beautiful amber color.

Golden nectar!

Unbelievably, we have sold all of it already! We took a few jars for ourselves, but there were many folks who had placed orders which were filled immediately. We had a slew of very happy customers.

After all of this harvesting, Tim gave me another couple of pounds of wax so I could continue to make candles and lip balm. I know I talked about the candle making, but the lip balm has been a very popular item as well.

Bauden's Beelicious Balm

I have made both peppermint and cherry lip balms. It's a pretty even match on which people like the most. I've found an imitation Burt's Bees formula of coconut oil, shea butter, beeswax and organic peppermint oil or organic cherry oil. It's been so fun to make!





To say I've learned a lot this year would be a major understatement. Most of all, I've had a ball! Learning about honeybees is an ongoing event. There is always something new to learn with them. The cleaning of beeswax and using that wax for candles and lip balm has been amazingly fun. 

I have opened an Etsy shop to sell our honey, candles and lip balm. A huge thank you to everyone who has placed an order already. I've had such a good time making these things and am thrilled others have enjoyed them too. If you have a moment, please check it out!




Next stop is getting our girls ready for Winter. I'm heading over to Tim's this week to do mite counts, check brood frames, honey frames and overall health of our girls. I'll make sure to document all of that for you. This year has gone so fast, but what a year it has been!

Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Friday, August 19, 2016

Wax On, Wax Off - Candle Making Day!

Hey everyone! I'm terribly sorry it's been so long since I last updated the blog. The bees are still working on their honey so I have no hive updates to report.  We have a game plan in place for September 10th to remove the honey super once drained and get our hives ready for Winter. I'll be documenting that for you once that begins. 

However, today is a much different kind of blog post. Today it's all about the wax from the hive!


So these were the wax cappings we got from the honey extraction process. I put the wax cappings in an old crock pot to melt. I added about two inches of water to the wax. The wax melted with the water as a HOT liquid. BEE CAREFUL! When that happens, I take a 2nd crock pot (but you can use a small bucket or bread pan, etc) and pour that liquid through an old T-shirt to filter out all of the debris that is mixed in the wax. I use a rubberband to secure the T-shirt to the 2nd crock pot. T-shirts work SO much better than cheese cloth as the fibers are tinier and catch more gunk.

Once the wax has begun to harden, the water will separate from it and will allow any remaining debris to fall to the bottom.  This is a clean wax cake that I took out of the crock pot after the wax hardened. How cool is that?


So what do I do with this cake of wax? Well, make candles of course! This is where the fun begins!





Alright, so the wax has melted and is totally clean and pure beeswax. I poured it into the bar molds and it looked like this:


You can see it's still liquified but it doesn't take too long to harden. The bars took about an hour or so before they were completely hardened. I had a lot of wax left so I took out a candle mold. It was exciting because I'd never done that before. Ok, I'd not done any of this, so it was a fun-filled day!


Here's what the bars look like once they are out of their molds. They say BEESWAX! How cool is that? Yes, I think it's all cool at this point.


Here was my work station after removing the first round of bars, pouring the 2nd round (you can see the wax in the molds is changing colors as it cools. The center mold is my candle mold, but that took several hours to cool before I could remove it. I just left it overnight so it would be ready in the morning. It was extremely difficult not to mess with it while it dried, but I refrained.


It was SO worth it! Look how cute this candle is! It's an old skep beehive with tiny bees on the side. Makes you think of Winnie the Pooh doesn't it? I have some vanilla scent but I didn't add it this time since I wanted to be sure I knew what I was doing. Next time I'll definitely add some scent. It's 3" x 2.5" and simply adorable!

The molds have been a big success. I think we're going to try lip balm too as beeswax lip balm is a popular thing. I saw a stick for $3.50 in a local store. Would you pay $3.50 for a stick of lip balm? Please let me know in the comments section. I saw my beehive candle at an online shop for $8 plus $8 shipping. I won't be charging that. I think $6 is much more appropriate. Let me know if you're interested. Like I said, I'll have regular and vanilla scented skep candles. Beeswax candles burn clean and for a little trivia, churches mostly use beeswax candles for that very reason.

This was such a fun endeavor and I'm happy to report that I have a bunch of wax ready to go. I have a feeling my weekend is going to be very busy. You know, like a bee - sorry, had to be done.

Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Honey Extraction Day with Tim & Friends

Hey guys! Today was a very fun day. I learned so much! 

Tim had 5 shallow honey supers to extract. We had 50 full frames as all of them were capped and ready! He invited 3 of us to help with the process so everyone had to play a part. We had to keep the garage door closed as some bees had discovered our hide out and wanted to check us out a little too closely!

There were two people in charge of uncapping the frames with a scratcher.

This is what a wax scratcher or fork looks like. It is one way to uncap the honey frames. There are also hot and cold knives that you can use to remove the cappings (by cutting the caps off) before you put the frames in the extractor. 

This is Kevin removing the caps from a frame.


Sue was the other uncapper at the table today.


All of the wax cappings go into a strainer that will drain whatever honey is in them into a bucket.

These are two of the strainers.
Strainers that go inside bucket to drain honey from wax.
Strainers in the draining bucket
After the honey is drained, you're left with a bunch of wax cappings that can be cleaned and used for many things. I'm going to attempt candle making and perhaps lip balm! We'll see how that goes.

Drained wax cappings
So after Kevin and Sue finished uncapping the frames, Tim would put them into the extractor. It holds nine frames, but he preferred to put six in saying it pulled the honey better. Listen to Tim, I always say!

Three frames of honey in the centrifuge before extraction.
The honey that came out was incredibly delicious and really a great color. My job was bottling all of the honey! I had a great system and rhythm going that I only had about a tablespoon or so of honey that leaked from the gate. Our grand total from the 50 frames? 146 pounds! WOW! 

The golden nectar!
Everyone was so efficient with their roles, that we had all 50 frames extracted and bottled in 2 hours! All of us had a great time learning the process and gaining more beekeeping friends. It was such a great morning. 

If you're in the area and want some local honey, be sure to contact me. I'll hook you up with some of the best liquid gold around.

Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Monday, July 25, 2016

A First with the Bees

Happy Monday, everyone!

Last week I had a very special guest in the bee yard with me. My sister Mary Ann came for a visit and had wanted to see the bees since we installed our package. She's been living vicariously through my blog and photo texts. I think she was more excited to see the bees than I was! And that says a lot! 

She saw the best in beekeeping and learned what happens when you don't follow the recommended steps of opening a hive. One of the first things we did was go into Tim's big hive. The first frame he pulled, had lots of brood on it and we were given a real treat.



We weren't able to see the entire birth because the frame was heavy and Tim needed to put it down. How cool is that though? If you look to the left of the frame toward the end, you can see a 2nd baby chewing her way out of her cell. It was an awesome thing to witness, especially for Mary Ann's first visit to see the bees!

Tim was kind enough to open the rest of his hives so she could see as much as possible in her visit. She lives in Texas so it's not so easy for her to come play with me and the bees.

Tim was not finding a queen in one of his hives that he'd just re-queened with a queen grafted from his big hive. It was a disappointing afternoon for sure, but the very next day, he said he reopened the hive and found a big yellow queen on the first frame with lots of eggs. He just had to give her another day to show what she's made of. Needless to say, I was thrilled for him that he didn't have to get another queen for that hive. He has a queen from fantastic stock that will do awesome work if she's anything like the queen who made her.

A view from inside the Flow super
We took a quick look through the observation window of my honey super. She LOVED looking through the window to see them working without having to bother them.

Now for the lesson of the day. ALWAYS follow the proper steps when opening a hive!

Because he's just that awesome, Tim made a ventilation/winter board (it would also give the girls an upper entrance) for my hive a couple days prior. So I brought it home and stained it then brought it with me to put on the hive. Well, I had it in my head that I just needed to pop it on the top of the hive and put the cover back on. I wasn't thinking of the steps in between to achieve that result. Mind you, the honey super is the top box on the hive, so when I opened the hive WITHOUT smoking the bees first, well, they ambushed me and with good reason. I got my very first sting, thankfully just on my knuckle through my glove. I had about 50 bees on my veil ready to get at me any way they could. It was not the smartest move on my part, but the girls instantly reminded me that I need to follow the proper steps before accomplishing my goal for the day.

I know I'll continue to learn from my mistakes, but it'll only make me a better beekeeper. I was thrilled my sister came to play with us and she loved every minute of it! How could she not? Bees are so cool!


Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Monday, July 18, 2016

More Views from the Honey Super

Hey guys!

I ventured over to Tim's to check on my girls. Can I just say again how much I love the observation window on this honey super? It's the coolest feature! Check out their activity today!



Lots more girls in the side window! Woohoo!

However, most times, there are usually more bees in the center of the hive as they tend to work their way out from the middle.

With that in mind, I took off the back viewing window (where we will do the harvesting of the honey) and checked to see if there were bees in the middle. Last week when I checked there weren't very many at all.

This was my view from today...



A much improved viewing! There are so many more bees in there sealing the gaps and working hard on filling the cells. To say I was excited would be an understatement for sure.

I have run out of honey from our first extraction already! Seventy pounds GONE in less than two weeks. I'll be sure to let you all know when we have more to sell. It's amazing to have such fresh honey!

Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Friday, July 15, 2016

Girls Working the Honey Super

Hi guys!

This is just a quick post to show what my girls are up to in the honey super! I installed the Flow™ frames (honey super) a week ago and after a couple days there were only a few in the box. I went back yesterday and saw this...




They are really starting to work the frames and I could not be happier. The observation window is probably my favorite part of this honey super. So cool to watch them work without disrupting them at all. I'll post again next week! Have a great weekend!

Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Bottling the Goodness that is Honey

Hello beelicious viewers! I participated in the fun experience last Friday (the 8th) of bottling pure delicious honey for the first time. It's quite a process and even a little messy. The good thing is you can always lick your fingers! 

Tim had extracted 2 mostly full buckets with near 70 pounds of honey inside as you know. Well, I offered to bottle that honey since I know we'll have so much more to bottle in a month or so. We'll have lots of work to do once the remainder of the honey supers are pulled from the hives. I'll be sure to have a special honey extraction blog post during that event. 

Tim lined up some bottles in the kitchen and the buckets close to the sink. After awhile I had gotten into a good rhythm and bottled it all within an hour or so. 


The gate on the honey bucket controlled the flow of honey into the jars. When it would spill, well, we'd have to wipe it off with our hands. No need to use water when that would be incredibly wasteful. This was liquid gold, after all.


Look at that amazing color! Tim had never harvested so early before but the nectar flow is still good so they'll fill up the boxes again in no time. 

Meanwhile, back at our personal hive...


I went to grab a peek in the observation windows but there was less than a handful of bees in the honey super. I know I need to be patient because the girls are going to do what they want exactly at the timeframe of their choosing. They will let me know when they're ready to deposit honey.

However, when I went back yesterday (Tuesday the 12th) I took a peek in the honey super again to find more girls working and sealing up the cracks!


I sure hope the number of girls continues to increase over the next couple weeks while the nectar flow is strong. They've done an amazing job in their house so I know they'll do a fantastic job in the honey super as well. 

Have a wonderful day and until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Thursday, July 7, 2016

It's a SUPER Kinda Day

Well, folks, today is the day! I'm calling it My Super Day! It started out like any regular day, I was sitting at the table eating my breakfast just minding my own business until I got a VERY important phone call. Tim called me and said, and I quote, "YOUR GIRLS ARE READY!" You may be asking, "ready for what?" Well, the answer is the most important thing ever, otherwise known as, ready to make honey! Needless to say, I inhaled the rest of my Di's Egg McSammich (it'll catch on) and headed over to Tim's. Yay!

3rd Brood Box was full and ready!
I got to Tim's and we did some last minute touch ups on the honey super. There was a little too much space on one end, so Tim added a shim to the side of the box and voila! The super is ready to go!


There are six Flow™frames in my super. Each frame holds 3kg or roughly 6.6 lbs of honey. 1 pound of honey is different than one pound of, say, water. One pound of water is 15.3 fluid ounces whereas one pound of honey is 11.3 fluid ounces. So one frame fills 74.5 fluid ounces of honey. Multiplied by 6, that's a lot of honey! Nice thing with the Flow™ is once we drain it and there is still a nectar flow on, they'll just chew off the wax cappings and start over and refill the cells.

Everything went quickly and easy as we just added it to the top of the hive. Once the roof was put on, I took a quick peek in the observation window and a few girls were already investigating the new frames. I'm beyond excited to look thru this window and watch them work.


It's been very hot and humid and I noticed the girls were bearding a bit on the front of the hive.


They needed more ventilation and more room. The honey super will help with space but then I removed the reducer to help with air flow. Hopefully these additions will help them stay happy in their home.


After we took care of my hive, we went to Tim's big hive and took the 4 honey supers off. After brushing bees out of the frames, we brought them inside his garage. He bought a new extractor to process honey at home instead of going to a friends with a truckload of honey frames. It'll make things so much easier for him since he now has 6 hives to harvest.

This is his set up in the garage.


The two buckets have gates on the bottom so you can bottle the honey as it pours from the bucket. The gate stops and starts the flow to make it easier in between jars. There is a strainer on top of the buckets to filter out bee parts, wax, and anything other than honey that you don't want in your jar. The extractor (the big steel drum looking thingy behind the buckets) holds 9 frames and should extract honey in about 10 minutes. 

Here is a closeup of the inside of the extractor.


If you put the frames along the triangle, three frames fit perfectly inside. After extracting 27 frames of honey, Tim got 70 pounds of honey! Fantastic, right? I'm so excited! 10 of the frames were not capped so they didn't get harvested. This means the bees did not put a wax capping on it so the moisture level is not right and therefore the honey is not ready. Honey should have around a 17% moisture level. The bees will fan the honey until it's just right, then cap it with wax.  That super will go back on the hive until the honey is ready. 

What a SUPER day! I'm excited that Tim's honey is ready on one of his hives and excited that we have a super on our hive. Our bees have enough honey stored for winter so I won't worry about them not having enough food. I'll check on them in a couple days to see how they're doing in the honey super. Having that observation window is going to make that really easy. And SUPER cool!

Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Friday, June 24, 2016

Bearding, Brood Boxes, and Swarm Cells. Oh My!

Happy Friday, folks! Today was another inspection day! It was a busy day for sure. First off, I got a text from Tim today showing me that my girls were bearding on the front of the hive today. They've never done that before!


It was a warm day and sometimes they "go onto the front porch" to cool off. But it was definitely getting crowded in there, too. So, a third brood box was definitely necessary. This brings me to a little problem. I have two Medium boxes left, BUT, they are both covering my feeder right now! A single Medium box isn't high enough to put the cover on. I don't have a spare deep, so I need some help fast. 


Tim to the rescue! He built a cedar feeding box for me! He made it cedar so it would match the rest of my boxes. What a good egg, right?! I finished staining it yesterday and it was dry today so it was ready to be put to use. He even put handles on it. I love it so much! He's such a good guy. 

Alright, that means that now I can use one of my Mediums for a third brood box and have one to spare! Awesome! 

We opened the hive and Tim maneuvered the frames so I could take a few pics of my frames for you. All of the frames were drawn so the hive was definitely ready for another box.


Here is a frame with a great brood pattern. Victoria is kicking ass! In the upper right hand corner you can see a bit of honey capped as well. You can see the difference in color between the brood caps and the honey caps as well.


You can see her handy work here as well. The larvae are so amazing to see! The nurse bees are busy taking care of them.


Here is a little closeup of that same picture. They look like little bagels in there! I love seeing the babies! 

I will check on them again next week to see how much they've built out the third box. They will store honey in there as well. We could be a couple weeks out from putting on the honey super! That will be amazing. 

So on we went to check out Tim's hives. Unfortunately, one of his hives is most likely queenless. We found older capped brood but no eggs or larvae. When we pulled out a brood frame, we found another surprise.


At the very top of this picture is a swarm cell. It's a queen cell but it was on the bottom of the frame. There were other queen cells along that frame as well. No eggs, larvae and finding queen cells are pretty big indicators that the hive is without a queen. It's a shame too as she was an overwintered queen. She was just not producing quickly at all. She may have died or they killed her and are making a new one to carry on the colony.

The rest of the hives are doing well. They all have honey supers on them and are slowing making the golden nectar! 

Next week could be exciting since my hive has a ton of bees now. They could easily build out that box pretty quickly. I'm pretty excited to check on them for sure.

Until next time, bee kind 🐝


Monday, June 20, 2016

A Group Effort

Hi all! Sorry for the delay. Had lots going on after our inspection on Friday and didn't have a chance to post!

The inspection was great. We had a couple other beekeepers with us to help inspect the five hives on the property. I had done my hive inspection myself so no pics from that unfortunately.

Tim, Sue and George were all involved with the rest of the hives so I can share a few pics from there.

First off, wow! My girls are working that 2nd brood box like crazy. A 3rd brood box will go on this week which will make my hive, a deep plus 2 medium brood boxes. That should get them thru the cold winter months. Victoria has been a laying fool! Her laying patterns are fantastic. All bunched together without much spacing. I could not be more pleased with her so far!

Tim has a great queen in his 2nd hive. Here is a great pattern from that hive.


Isn't that pretty? Honey stores outline the top and sides around the brood pattern. He was very happy with this hive.


He is checking out his queen's handy work.

We also opened his giant hive to add another honey super to the collection. He easily has 80 pounds of honey on it so far. It's really amazing!


A couple of girls were playing peek-a-boo from inside the honey super. They are just so dang cool. I've enjoyed this more than I can ever share.

Tim also met with another beekeeper a couple days ago who is grafting queens from his giant hive. They have grafted 80 queens from his queen's eggs. This is her 3rd year and she has built up an amazingly strong colony over and over. After 3 splits, she is still building at an amazing pace! 

My understanding is this: they take 3 day old eggs and place them in artificial queen cups. They put these cups in a Nuc box with nurse bees who feed them the royal jelly. 16 days later they have queens. There is more to it than that, but I'm not experienced enough to talk too much about it. Here is a quick shot of the rearing frame.


One of the Nucs had overzealous bees as well. They had built a "heart" out of wax comb. It's pretty incredible as well. I think they do incredible things all the time though.


Hopefully, I'll have more pics of my hive for you in a few days. This was a fun inspection with more of us playing in the hives. I'm sure it won't be the last time we collaborate.

Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Friday, June 10, 2016

Victoria's Blog Debut!

Happy Friday, everyone! 

I had a very unexpected happiness fill me today. Tim, my mentor, had purchased more sugar for the bee juice and I went by his house to get it. I didn't have my bee suit with me so I had no intention of doing an inspection today. Wearing shorts without a full suit to do an inspection isn't something I want to try anytime soon. My girls are pretty docile, usually, but I've seen them sting so I wanted to be covered. Tim says, "hey I have bee pants!" Of course he does! So even though I'd never heard of them before, I slipped them on over my shorts. The jacket and veil were donned and off we went with  a smoker to check out the girls!

My only concern today was to see if they had moved up into the 2nd brood box. Tim pulled up one of the middle frames to see how much was drawn out. It looked pretty good! There were two drawn frames in the new box so it should only be a couple weeks now before we can get to some honey production! 

HOWEVER, the biggest and bestest surprise came when Tim pulled out the second frame and saw Victoria on the bottom of the frame! This is her first blog appearance!


Ladies and Gents, may I present Queen Victoria! As you can see, she's much bigger than the other girls. Her body doesn't have stripes like the worker and drone bees and her wings only come halfway down her body, whereas, worker bees' wings are generally the length of their bodies.


You can see her short wings better in this photo. She is always surrounded by her royal court who constantly feed her and clean up after her. She is big and beautiful and I'm so thrilled she came out for a photo today!

So my day was made! I saw they had moved up to their new box and her royal badness came up as well. It was a very good day! Time to make more juice for the girls! Have a great weekend!

Until next time, bee kind! 🐝

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Swarms and Slo Mo

Howdy, folks! Happy Tuesday to you! So yesterday I got a Snapchat photo from my niece. It showed a swarm in the middle of a busy intersection in Chicago. At Michigan and Madison Avenues! That's a busy place! The bees don't care about that, they just knew their current home was not what they needed any longer and took off for greener pastures!

Why do they swarm? Well, they will swarm for a couple of reasons. First, it's how they form a new colony of bees to keep reproduction at a high. The queen will take about half of the current colony with her and they will continue to grow. The bees will fill their stomachs with honey and leave with the queen. They will be at their most docile while they are swarming. The other half of the colony left behind will usually have queen or swarm cells that will hatch a new queen to reproduce the colony.  Another reason they will swarm is if their current hive doesn't have enough space for them to grow. So make sure they have enough frames and boxes to expand upon!

In one of my first posts, I showed you a pic of a bee swarm hanging under a picnic table. They will find anywhere to hang (literally) while they look for a new home. This colony simply found a bicycle!


Isn't that amazing? There was an article written in the Chicago Tribune about it today as well.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-loop-bee-swarm-captured-20160606-story.html

On another note, Tim brought me to his other bee yard this afternoon. A woman who owns some acreage, was looking for a beekeeper to bring bees to her place for pollination. Tim happily obliged and brought two nucs to her property. They are doing very well. They're drinking about 3 quarts of juice per week and are currently working on their 2nd brood box. We filled their feeders and left.


We didn't do any inspections, but the land around the hives was beautiful.

I wanted to do something fun with my bees before I left for the day. On my iPhone, I noticed a slo mo feature on the video camera. As soon as I saw that, I knew what I wanted to do. Anyone that tells you that bees are great flyers, really hasn't watched them at all. Put it in full screen for the full effect. Enjoy!



Wasn't that fun? I could watch them all day.

Until next time, bee kind 🐝