- Joined
- Sep 7, 2015
- Messages
- 815
- Reaction score
- 64
- Location
- East Yorkshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 16
How do other beekeepers feed messy/wet cappings back to the bees?
Thanks
Thanks
100% Agree..I think you are just becoming aware that many beeks write a load of carp about lots of things that they have mainly read about but not actually done...or if they have, have neglected to tell us about the practical issues involved....
As the previous two posts written by people who have done as suggested in the books show...it don't work the way the books suggest...best perhaps to take their practical advice?
Thanks for all your views, really helpful practical feedback. I bought an old metal (galvanised) filter tray for recapping comb at this years Bee auction. Think I read some where can’t sell honey that’s been in such a tray. Anyone know if that’s true or if the metal affects the taste ?I used to do it in a miller feeder with the inner lid removed, but it's a hassle. You need a shallow layer of cappings over a big area, otherwise the bees can't recover all the honey if it's just a big pile of wax. Then you need to stir it around every few days so they continue to access all the wax. Which could mean veil, smoker, disturbed bees, etc.
If you leave for a week, they will build comb.
This year I'm going to rinse in water and try making mead. Then the remains will go in my solar melter.
How do other beekeepers feed messy/wet cappings back to the bees?
Thanks
I bought an old metal (galvanised) filter tray for recapping comb at this years Bee auction. Think I read some where can’t sell honey that’s been in such a tray. Anyone know if that’s true or if the metal affects the taste ?
Thanks for all your views, really helpful practical feedback. I bought an old metal (galvanised) filter tray for recapping comb at this years Bee auction. Think I read some where can’t sell honey that’s been in such a tray. Anyone know if that’s true or if the metal affects the taste ?
I might try a contact feeder as it may work too by being inverted above the feeder.If you put them in a rapid feeder with the central section removed all you need to do is put the sealed feeder over the crown board hole. Job done!
Open the feeder once a day and give the cappings a quick stir and within a week the cappings are like dry sawdust. The stirring prevents the build up of comb as well.
Tried this yesterday. It worked but encouraged serious robbing. Big lesson be very careful whilst feeding back cappings/ honey it can cause serious robbing. I’ve now moved the nuke 2 miles home, hope they stay, will close for the day.If you put them in a rapid feeder with the central section removed all you need to do is put the sealed feeder over the crown board hole. Job done!
Open the feeder once a day and give the cappings a quick stir and within a week the cappings are like dry sawdust. The stirring prevents the build up of comb as well.
Tried this yesterday. It worked but encouraged serious robbing. Big lesson be very careful whilst feeding back cappings/ honey it can cause serious robbing. I’ve now moved the nuke 2 miles home, hope they stay, will close for the day.
Enter your email address to join: