On Jul 13, 9:59 am, Roger <ver...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> On Jul 13, 8:43 am, ram <ram_palb...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > Hello, I was wondering what to do with the honey that is crystalized
> > in the comb. I went to extract 5 heavy frames yesterday, and finally
> > all the comb that was sealed was crystalized underneigth.
>
> > Should I put in back on the hive in autumn as source of winter
> > stores? Can the bees easily process it in this state.?
>
> > Should I leave it outside for the bees to rob? I would have done
> > this, but of course, everybody knows that encouraging robbing is not
> > good, and anyways, we're in a pretty good honey flow here now, so they
> > probably won't be particularily interested...any advice?
>
> > Should I eat it myself, wax, honey and all? on toast?
>
> > Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks
>
> > ram
>
> you could try and place it in a hot box. I made mine out of an old
> chest freezer and placed a 100 watt bulb in it. I then place either
> supers of honey inside or pails of honey that chystalized for a day or
> two (watch inside temp closely) and then when warmed enough or
> decrystalized either bottle or extract.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
So I assume that the temperature at which wax melts is higher than the
temperature at which honey liquifies. Would you know which
temperature the wax will hold up to before melting?


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