White comb

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SixFooter

Queen Bee
Joined
Sep 16, 2009
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Location
Merseyside
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National
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Why is wild comb sometimes a very white colour as opposed to the usual yellowish colour?
 
I always thought all comb was white when new and over time it slowly changes colour to what we see most of the time.
 
All new comb is white when it starts life, it gradually, or not so gradually, as the case may be gets stained from use, brood, honey, pollen.

Snap.

Chris
 
Last edited:
Brand new wax cells, before they are filled, are always a nice clean white. Some bee types also have a reputation for producting very white cappings - Italians for example. One of my Buckfast colonies produces noticeably whiter capped honey than the others, which are creamier in colour. Snow-white capping is nice for cut comb.

If it's the cappings that strike you as particularly bright white in colour, perhaps your local mutt/wild bees have a lot of Italian ancestry...
 

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