Supers brought home for extracting their honey |
Radial extractor with some frames honey and
froth at bottom |
Close-up of Saf Natura 9-frame radial extractor
containing comb frames with honey and froth at the bottom |
Saf Natura 9-frame radial extractor lid open
with frames inside plus frame closeup |
Saf
Natura 9-frame radial extractor with comb & cappings & uncaping
fork |
Honeycomb cappings in bowl and uncapping fork
in action and extractor behind |
Ripener tap and filled honey jars |
Ripener tap and filled honey jars fairly closeup resting on a 3-frame
nucleus beehive |
Ripener tap and filled honey jars closeup |
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Twice in 2004, in June and in September, the
hives produced sufficient honey to allow some to be taken off.
This
beekeeper prefers to make the regular apiary visits by bicycle.
When the equipment to be transported is heavy and/or bulky he
uses a trailer. The trailer shown in the first picture is a Bykaboose
Gecko (www.bykaboose.com,
IL, USA) with the superstructure replaced by a fish box which
was found washed up on the coast. The fish box neatly fits the
'National' hive boxes used. In the trailer in the picture are
two shallow boxes or 'supers' containing the frames of comb with
honey. The payload of this trailer is about 40kg, sufficient
for at least two completely full supers.
The
next four pictures show the stainless steel Saf Natura manual
9-frame radial extractor (www.safnatura.com)
used to centrifuge the honey out of the comb. The wax cappings
of the comb are first removed with an uncapping fork (pictures
5 and 6). The frame is then placed in the rotor of the extractor
with the normally horizontal top bar of each frame now in a vertical
orientation towards the wall of the extractor. As the bees make
the cells in the comb slope slightly downwards from their openings
(presumably to prevent nectar from running out), when the rotor
is set spinning with the frames in this orientation by turning
the handle on the extractor, the cells behave like thousands
of little buckets being tipped to empty them. The rotor is turned
until no more droplets of honey fly against the outer wall of
the extractor. The honey runs down the wall and collects in the
bottom of the extractor (visible in the second picture). It is
removed
through a tap (not shown) near the base.
The
honey, which at this stage contains many small pieces of wax
from the cappings, is transferred to a stainless steel strainer
(not shown) which sits in the top of the 'ripener', the stainless
steel urn shown in the 7th picture. It is then left overnight
to allow the many small air bubbles and wax particles small enough
to pass through the strainer to rise to the surface. If the crop
is especially big it is stirred in the ripener first to ensure
uniformity of the bottled product. The honey is poured into one
pound jars using the tap at the bottom of the ripener and the
lids are screwed in place.
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