Gilberdyke John
Queen Bee
- Joined
- May 5, 2013
- Messages
- 5,700
- Reaction score
- 2,010
- Location
- HU15 East Yorkshire
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 10
In an old 2011 thread it was mentioned that boiling sucrose syrup created HMF. In the light of the current thread about how hot (temperature of syrup) bees can take syrup and the usual topic drift, I'm curious as to how significant using boiling water to make up syrup is to HMF creation.
Personally I aren't likely to have any problems since I make my autumn 2:1 syrup up with white T&L et al product, plus water straight from the cold tap and agitate several times over the day. Normally the sugar has gone into solution by next morning when the bucket(s) are standing in the kitchen. At that point I add a dose of HM emulsified thymol and mix ready for feeding via rapid feeders. Maybe commercial beekeepers haven't got the luxury of time that I have but I'd estimate most members of the forum could easily prepare their syrup the day before use?
Personally I aren't likely to have any problems since I make my autumn 2:1 syrup up with white T&L et al product, plus water straight from the cold tap and agitate several times over the day. Normally the sugar has gone into solution by next morning when the bucket(s) are standing in the kitchen. At that point I add a dose of HM emulsified thymol and mix ready for feeding via rapid feeders. Maybe commercial beekeepers haven't got the luxury of time that I have but I'd estimate most members of the forum could easily prepare their syrup the day before use?