Tag Archives: Beekeeping
HOW TO light a long lasting bee smoker quickly and easily in only minutes, that will smolder for hours.
An essential skill for anyone starting out in the beekeeping hobby or beekeeping industry. We have many smokers available at our online store http://www.mahakobees.com/store.html ready for immediate shipping (mostly free in USA), so feel free to visit and get yourself a smoker or an entire backyard beekeeping starter kit if you are ready to indulge in this excellent earth saving hobby as an apiarist.
A bee smoker is essential for a beekeeper. Most beekeepers will not undertake a regular hive inspection without a well lit bee smoker. The cold smoke masks the pheromones of the guard bees and alerts the bees that a fire may be approaching. This helps the bee keeper because the bees gorge on honey, fill their stomachs in preparation for an urgent migration if necessary. Once the bee stomach is full, they are less likely to fly around and sting the beekeeper doing the beehive inspection in their apiary.
This video describes full instructions to light a bee smoker, items needed, and the step by step guide to a successfully smoldering beekeepers smoker. The steps outline using hay and wood filings, but also a layer of insulating cardboard (or ideally non-toxic paper as correctly noted by Honey-B-guys in the comments below), which protects the bee smoker itself, insulates the heat, and certainly maintains the smoldering coals a lot longer than usual. Make sure you pack the smoker well for a long and easily reinvigorated smoke with just a few puffs of the bellows.
We trust you will find this beekeeping 101 how to video and if you do, we invite you to subscribe, share, and thumbs up below. We very much appreciate it.
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The good old skep hives. Beautiful apiary. Thx for sharing. – http://pinterest.com/pin/337066353334499964/?utm_source=android_share
HOT knife vs HEAT gun part 2 – the VERDICT post extraction
HOT knife vs HEAT gun part 2 – the VERDICT post extraction
So, let’s talk about the outcome. Is there a place for the heatgun in beekeeping? That is a resounding YES. Is it good, great, or fantastic at uncapping the honey frames? In our view, it is not. It works OK at the best of times, and only on very specific frames, where tiny air pockets exist in between the honey and the wax capping itself. In absence of such air pocket, the wax did not pop open or melt at all. It simply heated the wax, heated the honey (which is what you want to avoid if possible – although the hot knife also heats it, so the comparison is on par for both methods), and then the wax hardened again, thus sealing the #raw honey inside the cup/cell again, never to be extracted unless further uncapping process, such as the use of an uncapping fork is used.
There is a valid argument for the use of #heat gun for the uncapping process in that it reduces the need for beeswax cappings processing. This does take considerable time if you choose to harvest the cappings, strain them (to reduce loss of your honey harvest), then wash, clean, melt, filter, and refine a few times to produce a product ready for further utilisation or sale to the many beeswax dependent industries, such as cosmetics and candle making. You can watch our 3 part video series where we cover the beeswax processing for small home based quantities:















