First Honey Harvest, 2021

Hey guys, just last week I harvested my first batch of honey for the year! It is a long process, but I will try to share it with you. The first thing I had to do was get the honey off of the hives. To do that I removed the lid and the inner cover and replaced them with fume boards and then used smoke (under the boards) to get the bees to go down to the bottom of the hive. After I did this to chase as many bees out of the boxes that I could, I used a leaf blower to blow the rest of the bees out. Once the boxes were bee free I loaded onto the back of my truck and took them to the honey house on my mentor’s property on the Putnam County/Defiance County Line.

Once I got there the process began to remove the honey from the combs and put into buckets for later packaging. The extraction process starts by cutting off the wax capping on both sides of every frame. To do this, I use was is called a hot knife (an electric knife that has an internal heater to allow it to slice through and melt the wax cappings like butter). I then placed the frames into the extractor. The extractor holds 20 frames at a time. Once switched on, the extractor spins the frames causing the honey to be flung out to the sides. It then drains to the bottom. Once there was enough honey in the extractor I open the valve at the bottom and drain the honey out into a straining bucket. This allows me to strain any bits of bee, wax, or any other debris that was inside the honey.

Once clean the honey was drained from the strainer and placed into 5 gallon  buckets I loaded up my vehicle for home. I took the empty honey supers back to my hives in my bee yard and hopefully they will be full again in a few weeks for a second harvest. Once home I packaged up some of the new honey for several honey orders and delivered them! Overall the entire process took 4+ hours, but it was all worth it in the end because I ended up with almost 200 lbs. of honey to bring home!

 

Field Trips & Presentations

Over the summer, and into the future, my goal is to educate people more about bees and beekeeping. This venture has been a passion of mine ever since I started beekeeping 4 years ago and I hope to continue it!  The biggest way I have done education and outreach this year by hosting field trips.  These group or family trips allow people have a hands on experience with beekeeping and lets them look inside the hives! This spring/summer I have been about to host several homeschool groups and families, and have done a presentation at a local school as well.

The kids that came really seemed to enjoy the experience of getting to look inside a beehive and learn more about bees. Most of the kids were pretty young, so the attention span was a bit of a challenge for the presentations I hoped to give, but I tried to adjust to the group that was there and interact as much as possible during my talk.  During my presentation I cover topics like, how honey is made, what types of bees are in a hive, and what are some of the tools that beekeepers use. After the presentation was over I would let the kids put on beekeeping gear and showed them what the inside of the hive looks like. Once we got into the bees but the kids and parents got really excited to see everything I can see on a daily/weekly basis.

For the presentation that I brought to the school I would bring an observation hive for kids to look at. It is basically a small 5 frame hive that has a window to allow the kids to look inside the hive. They love it. The observation hive allows for people to see what is in a beehive without having all the bees flying around. During that presentation I use the hive to show them where the honey is, the pollen and even what the young brood and eggs look like.

Overall these field trips have been a huge success so far and my plan is to continue these while it is still warm this fall and then hopefully do more with a bigger variety of school groups and clubs next year!