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Which of these has the greatest merit?
Thank-you...that leads to my other question posted elsewhere. After the honey has been extracted, and if the comb has been drawn unevenly, would you trim it back?Knife - quicker and far less messy than fassassing around than a fork
Helps to have an even surface on the comb for the next crop as well
I've done it in the past - use a serrated uncapping knife or a decent bread saw, end of the cells get a bit tatty - but the bees soon sort that out.Thank-you...that leads to my other question posted elsewhere. After the honey has been extracted, and if the comb has been drawn unevenly, would you trim it back?
I don't bother, just put wide spacers on. Let them get as much honey in one frame as possible. But I use a heat gun
You uncap your frames with a fork?Fork for me , when I cut back frames I would prefer them cold the edge of an uncapping folk will easily do the job.
Yes... I don't get many frames like that - foundationless tends to be a bit thicker and a little more lumpy ... I will sort the frames into the 'quick slice and job's done' and the rest.My old carving knife works as well as that on new , flat comb, like he is using.
Is that instead of 4 candles?
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