Okay - well as a fairly new beek and small scale I'll start this one off.......
Last year I got the massive amount of 5lbs of honey. I cleared used Porter bee escapes, to be honest they weren't that succesfull, as there were still bees in the super the following week............I don't know how that can be, maybe somebody can enlighten.
This year for my spring honey I didn't have any full supers, but several sealed frames (10) so I just picked them out and brushed the bees off. It took two goes, the first over the hive, then I put them to one side and covered and then had another brush when I'd finished everything else, it was easy, but I wouldn't want to do a large amount.
I extract using a tangential 6 frame. I uncapped using my very sharpe knife, I put the cappings into an aluminium tray in the sunlight in my kitchen, then spun the frames. I seived to get big lumps out through a normal kitchen seive, then I put the honey through a jelly bag (I make a lot of jam and it is nylon and used for hanging fruit pulp) including most from the cappings tray. It took 2 days to eventually go through, then I put a lid on the honey container and stirred several times a day with a big whisk until I couldn't any longer - this inadvertently creamed my honey for me
In the meantime I put the remaining cappings and the trimmings from the supers into a saucepan, added rainwater and brought to the boil, strained it through muslin into a plastic container. When the wax had set, I took it off and did the whole thing again - twice I think, till I had pretty clean wax. The first lot of water which had the most honey in I put it in my feed container with some thymol mix and have re-fed it back to a couple of nucs I made.
To bottle the honey, I stood the container in a sink of hot water for several hours till it was moveable again. The water never got above 49c and I kept topping up with hot to keep the temperature correct. My honey bucket didn't have a tap so I ladled an amount into a hard plastic bowl. Gave it a 30 second zip in the microwave which upped it's fluidity and helped any air bubbles rise and then poured into jars. I have proper tareable catering scales so that bit was easy. I used 340g (12oz) hexagonal jars which I have lots of as I use them for jam (I sell) bought from Brisol Bottle (Bottlesouth). Gold twist grip lids - from Thornes and labels also from Thornes.
I'm selling through my local shop and also privately and will eventually get a sign for my field gate.
It sounds fiddly, it was my first real go and there are things I will change, I'm going to make a warming cabinet as it was a terrible waste of time hanging round and keeping the water topped up. Last years (summer) honey never set so was bottled easily.
I haven't got a big kitchen or area to use so I will probably extract another super next week, I was going to do it today but not enough was capped.
I got 27lbs - 35 jars
Frisbee