29 Mar

INGENIUS IDEA! No more back or shoulder pain


Dear viewers,

This short video explains the use of a simple thing – just a SCREW to be exact – which literally will revolutionize the way you remove bees wax cappings from your honey frames. This is not my original idea, but I cannot recall where I have seen it in the past. Check out the video to see what I mean. Absolute MUST for small home hobby beekeeper.


A little more detail:

1)
we recommend you use a stainless steel screw as you are dealing with a consumable food, and it is raw, unprocessed honey, so stainless steel is a must in our mind.


2)
use a screw that is at least 5 cm in length (2 inches), depending on your thickness of the timber cross bar, and the type of frames you are using. You can’t go wrong by testing. Simply place the frame onto the screw, and rotate it in its fully vertical position. If it does not catch on the wooden cross bar, you got it just right. You may need to adjust by trial and error.


3)
We find this method is fantastic, simple, and saves you lots of back and wrist pains. You do not have to carry or continually counter weight the full capped honey frame, which can sometimes way up to 4 kilograms. However, having said that, it is still a relatively slow part of the honey extraction process and not suitable for any larger quantities of honey frames. If you have only a few hives, this is fine in a small hobbyist style homesteading environment, but the commercial decappers are far superior. Cost is probably the limiting factor, then space, and honey supply/demand that makes the commercial justification a little difficult to satisfy.

Please leave your comments below, we would love to hear from you, ask questions, and share your thoughts. We would love to hear from you.

We invite you to share our videos if you find them useful and quietly hope you can also click the subscribe and like buttons to help us grow this channel. Thank you in advance.

Enjoy your day or evening
MahakoBees


Music composed, performed and provided by Groovey – Adam Kubát a Pavel Křivák
You can visit their website on: http://www.groovey.cz/

Also, a big thank you goes to Kevin McLeod for providing his royalty free music Ïnner Light”. We appreciate your kind contribution.

28 Mar

INCREDIBLE feeding frenzy! Parrots as pollinators “swarming”.

INCREDIBLE feeding frenzy! Parrots as pollinators “swarming”?

Hello everyone. We captured this short video clip of a large flock of native Australian parrots a little while ago and you may find it interesting. Especially in light of the short article below. Birds are better pollinators than insects. Interesting. Native Australian parrots

would definitely be one of them, and in this clip you can see how noisy they can be when in a feeding frenzy. Aren’t they beautiful though, and not the least bit concerned about me video recording them. Enjoy, share, comment, or subscribe if you wish to see more great videos in the future.

MahakoBees

Interesting article:

Birds are better pollinators than insects

“Bees don’t see red very well at all,” Adrian told Australian Geographic. “By mapping the history of the flower evolution, it was possible to show that red flowers pollinated by birds actually evolved from flowering plants that used to be insect-pollinated.”

A possible advantage of attracting birds, is that some insects can be inefficient pollinators. The change in colouring, Adrian says, “enables plants with red flowers to get efficient delivery of pollen to enable sexual reproduction, and avoid having nectar stolen by insects.”

Professor Marie Herberstein, an ecologist at Macquarie University in Sydney, says the discovery about the interaction between plants and their pollinators is very interesting.

Marie says that while it has been known for some time that insects are attracted to blue, this is the most complete study showing that bird pollinators are attracted to red.

“This is particularly significant in Australia as we have more bird pollinators than any other continent,” Marie says.

From: http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2013/03/red-flowers-the-trick-to-attracting-birds/

27 Mar

Can you spot the SNEAKY INTRUDER flying in and out of a honey bee hive

Dear viewers,

This was not planned, but during a quick visit to the hives, I noticed something strange yet wonderful. Can you spot the SNEAKY INTRUDER flying in and out of the beehive? Right past the guard bees? Its tiny, harmless and a very close relative to the honey bee. Leave your comments below. For those not searching, this is a clip showing honey bees up close at the beehive entrance fanning eagerly to cool and ventilate the beehive. You can also see some guard bees, and clearly not doing their job right, unless this is a unique relationship?

Thank you for visiting and watching. Please share this video and subscribe if you are enjoying our content.

Have a fantastic day

MahakoBees

Music composed, performed and provided by Groovey – Adam Kubát a Pavel Křivák

You can visit their website on: http://www.groovey.cz/

24 Mar

young BOY HELPING build a timber honey frame – inserting eyelets

Dear viewers,

I could not help myself and had to upload this one! COOL little BOY helping build our timber honey frames. Very cute, very excited, and great skill with the eyelets and all the tools to be honest. We believe in getting kids involved in beekeeping young and in all the activities associated with it. Bee it hive inspections, building brood boxes, painting and cleaning honey supers, extracting honey, bottling, and off course cooking with RAW honey and in the end, enjoying the fruits of our labor. Get them away from the TV and computer games and get them out there, into the back yard, into nature and into the fields, learning real life skills. This video is a little example of such an activity. Great little beekeeper in the making. Take a look and share the video. We trust you will enjoy this short clip and it may put a smile on your face.

Enjoy and have a fabulous day.

MahakoBees

Music composed, performed and provided by Groovey – Adam Kubát a Pavel Křivák

You can visit their website on: http://www.groovey.cz/

Also, a big thank you goes to Kevin McLeod for providing his royalty free music “Up on a Housetop”. We appreciate your kind contribution.

24 Mar

A fantastic youtube playlist – all about honey bee close up videos

CLOSEUPS of Honey Bees – Beekeeping (playlist)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pU85oNHkSdA&list=PLfE6cWwwWKoiXEp4xSACAmvTHSrweW0nU

This is a new beekeeping playlist we have created which consists of all sorts of videos of our bees. This includes our Honey Been as well as our Australian native Stingless bees. Most videos are closeups or slow motion to give you an opportunity to really see the been in detail. So please, click though to flick through the videos, like them, and we invite you to subscribe for many more intriguing beekeeping additions in the future.

Thank you for visiting
MahakoBees

24 Mar

CLOSEUPS of Honey Bees – Beekeeping (playlist)

CLOSEUPS of Honey Bees – Beekeeping (playlist)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pU85oNHkSdA&list=PLfE6cWwwWKoiXEp4xSACAmvTHSrweW0nU

This is a new beekeeping playlist we have created which consists of all sorts of videos of our bees. This includes our Honey Been as well as our Australian native Stingless bees. Most videos are closeups or slow motion to give you an opportunity to really see the been in detail. So please, click though to flick through the videos, like them, and we invite you to subscribe for many more intriguing beekeeping additions in the future.

Thank you for visiting

MahakoBees

20 Mar

Decapping fresh honey frame wax cappings with hot knife closeup

This is a short clip of a fresh honey bee full timber frame being decapped with an electric hot knife. Rather a slow process, especially where the wax and comb have not been built up by the honey bees over and above the timber top and bottom bars. Those areas we decap with a decapping fork. We find the electric hot knife sufficient, but perhaps a steam hot knife would be better. Also a larger version would be nice. This one is cooled too quickly and does not reheat fast enough, so its slow and your hands get ratehr sore after a while. Before running the hot knife just under the wax cappings, we use a blunt knife to clean the frames and have them ready for use in the hives. This frame is a very light coloured but absolutely delicious tasing raw honey.

I may do a video later showing the entire process and the setup we have. Beekeeping is a great hobby, and we are only just learning so any feedback or suggestions are very welcome.

19 Mar

RAW PROPOLIS. Honeybee produced Propolis looks like this. Benefits of pr…

This very short clip shows the freshly collected raw propolis we scraped off the frames and boxes after honey collection. It is not clean nor purified, just as is from the hive. Below are some definitions and uses of propolis. Let us know if you are interested in more detailed videos of propolis uses and we will create them as required. Propolis is one of the most powerful natural shields to be found in nature: anti-infective, antibiotic, antiviral, fungicidal, powerful antioxidant, help to prevent cancer. Its effects are more powerful in combination with other medicinal plants such as Echinacea and Garlic for stimulating the immune system and protecting the body from infection.

Propolis is a resinous mixture that honey bees collect from tree buds, sap flows, or other botanical sources. It is used as a sealant for unwanted open spaces in the hive. Propolis is used for small gaps (approximately 6 millimeters (0.24 in) or less), while larger spaces are usually filled with beeswax. Its color varies depending on its botanical source, the most common being dark brown. Propolis is sticky at and above room temperature, 20 °C (68 °F). At lower temperatures, it becomes hard and very brittle. For centuries, beekeepers assumed[1] that bees sealed the beehive with propolis to protect the colony from the elements, such as rain and cold winter drafts. However, 20th century research has revealed that bees not only survive, but also thrive, with increased ventilation during the winter months throughout most temperate regions of the world.

Propolis is now believed to:[2]
– reinforce the structural stability of the hive;
– reduce vibration;
– make the hive more defensible by sealing alternate entrances;
– prevent diseases and parasites from entering the hive, and
– to inhibit fungal and bacterial growth;[3]
– prevent putrefaction within the hive. Bees usually carry waste out of and away from the hive. However, if a small lizard or mouse, for example, finds its way into the hive and dies there, bees may be unable to carry it out through the hive entrance. In that case, they would attempt instead to seal the carcass in propolis, essentially mummifying it and making it odorless and harmless. (Wikipedia – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propolis)

Also a good source of information is: http://en.mr-ginseng.com/propolis/

MahakoBees

18 Mar

4 year old boy BEEKEEPER training for real-world beekeeping.

This is a short clip of a 4 year old boy training how to be a beekeeper and how to handle a honeybee frame… ahhh, the smell or real honeybee wax foundation. Loves working with honeybees (with a suit and gloves off course! just for now…), going to the apiary hives, processing honey, wax, maintaining beehives, building frames, painting the boxes and so on. Always helpful and fantastic little helper. Started beekeeping at the age of three. Beekeeping is one of many fun activities you can do with your kids. Teach them about the world around us. The natural world. Beats Gameboy, Playstation or the Xbox shoot’em up games for sure. Not to mention the endless hours spent in front of television where the big corporations indoctrinate their little minds with consumerism. Anyway, enough of my rant. Beekeeping is fun. Give it a go with your kids.

MahakoBees

18 Mar

Amazing bee stinger IN ACTION! OUCH!!!

See a bee sting pump venom from its stinger sack furiously. This is what happens when you get stung by a bee.

In this short video, I setup a macro lens and magnifying glasses and pulled out a stinger from a dying Honey Bee from our apiary. It was almost dead, and I made sure she does not suffer off course. However, as you can see, the stinger continues to spasm and pump the bee poison for more than 5 minutes after it has been removed from the bee. The more venom / poison is released into your skin the more painful and more swollen it can get. Remove the bee sting with a nail by scraping it away. Never squeeze the venom sack to pull it out. Hope you find this video interesting.

MahakoBees