Bee Diary: Extraction 2013

Lughnasa                                                                    Honey Moon

We harvested four supers of honey under the honey moon.  Kate and I worked all day, IMAG0872until about 6:30 pm to extract the honey from 36 frames with honey on both sides.  Pulling the supers went much more easily this year since I used a gentle chemical that bees don’t like to get the bees to leave the super.  I loaded them on a pallet and covered them with cloth covers Kate made yesterday.

This was the first year we ran the extractor in the kitchen, rather than on the deck.  We wanted to reduce the number of bees coming to the extraction.  The chemical, the super covers and extracting inside all helped.  We had only a few bees and they were ones who had not vacated the supers before I removed them from the colony.  Success on that front.

But.  We air condition our home as some of you know.  Honey at 90 degrees flows smoothly out of the supers and into the extraction tank.  At 65 degrees, not so much.  The first six frames took over a half an hour.  We would have been at this well into the night.  So.

Kate stepped up her uncapping skills which helped us get to all the honey, fast.  We debated taking the extractor outside on the deck, but that would mean we couldn’t keep IMAG0868the honey gate open and let the honey flow directly into a bucket.  We thought about the garage, but before we made a decision, we decided to give it one more try with Kate’s new uncapping process and a second innovation, a hair dryer stuck into the extractor while it was working.

There we go.  We got our time for six frames down to around 10-12 minutes.  Much better.  I estimate that we have between 65 and 75 pounds of honey, our best year ever and one resulting from a package hived in April.  Extraordinary, especially considering the very cool spring.

Tomorrow is clean up and bottling, then storing the extracting equipment for next year.

Feels good to be done. (though.  there are still two supers on the colony because the nectar flow might not be quite over.)

 

Virgil

Lughnasa                                                                     Honey Moon

(William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Dante and Virgil, 1850, oil on canvas.  Musée d’Orsay, Paris)

Tom Crane found this poem by Virgil:

Virgil’s Bees

 

Bless air’s gift of sweetness, honey

from the bees, inspired by clover,

marigold, eucalyptus, thyme,

the hundred perfumes of the wind.

Bless the beekeeper

 

who chooses for her hives

a site near water, violet beds, no yew,

no echo. Let the light lilt, leak, green

or gold, pigment for queens,

and joy be inexplicable but there

in harmony of willowherb and stream,

of summer heat and breeze,

each bee’s body

at its brilliant flower, lover-stunned,

strumming on fragrance, smitten.

 

For this,

let gardens grow, where beelines end,

sighing in roses, saffron blooms, buddleia;

where bees pray on their knees, sing, praise

in pear trees, plum trees; bees

are the batteries of orchards, gardens, guard them.

Bee Diary: Getting Ready for Extraction

Lughnasa                                                           Honey Moon

Everything has the dust washed off the extractor, the uncapping tub, the pail with the uncappingknifehoney gate, the three filters, the five gallon pails to hold the honey before bottling.  Kate has made cloth covers for the honey supers.  When I push the bees out with honey robber, I’ll put the supers on a pallet on a two-wheel dolly, then cover them so the bees don’t swarm back on the frames.

The kitchen will not look like itself for quite a while tomorrow.  Instead it will become our honey house with the extractor whirring, frames being uncapped with the hot knife, honey moving slowly through the filters, removing bee parts.  There is no way to extract honey without it making a mess.  The trick will be to have the mess end up on the plastic and the cardboard.

When we finish the extraction, we’ll still have honey in the uncapping tub since uncapping itself takes off some honey along with the cell’s white caps.  That honey has to separate out from the wax and that can take awhile.  The supers have to go back on the images (1)colony for cleaning.  The bees will clean them up, then they can be removed and stored for the winter.

After we complete those steps, we’ll bottle honey using the five-gallon pail with the honey gate.  At some point later we’ll put on the Artemis honey labels.  Up to this point I’ve not learned how to work with the wax, but I plan to do that over the next few weeks.  I want to make candles.

Of course, the bee keeping doesn’t end with the honey extraction.  In fact, after I get the honey supers in the house, I still have to remove last weeks hopguard strips and put in this weeks, the final treatment.  This is for varroa mites.  Also, I’ll need to check, sometime in the next few weeks, the honey supply the colony has for the winter.  If it’s 400_Honey Extraction_0240inadequate, I’ll have to feed the colony to prepare them for winter.

There is yet more to do after that.  I have trees to cut down and brush to remove for the new bee yard.  Leveling out four colony bases and moving this colony back there will happen later in the fall or early winter.

My current plan is to have four colonies on a regular basis.    That means buying one more package next spring if this one overwinters and I can divide it.  In 2014 I would have three colonies, a parent, a divided colony and a package.  If I can maintain their health, then the parent colony will die, this year’s divide will divide in 2015 to form two colonies and the 2014 package will divide in 2015, getting me up to the four that I want to maintain.

 

Flourishing in Andover

Lughnasa                                                                        Honey Moon

Today to get ready, tomorrow to go.  Honey time.

With the garden, the bees, the book, Ancientrails life has been full these last few weeks. IMAG0738 Good.  Full is good.  I read somewhere that happiness consists in having just enough to do.  Not too much, not too little.  Call it the goldilocks theory of happiness.

As I’ve written here before, happiness is in no way my goal, but eudaimonia, or human flourishing, is and I can see the correlation.  We need tasks that stretch us and challenge us, but not so far as to snap us in two.  We need time that has fulfillment and grace, not time that puts us on the hamster wheel of ambition but on the ancientrail of gnothi seauton.  Know thyself.

(me, eudaimoniac in my German safety goggles)

These days so I find myself whistling and humming a lot.  Now, tomorrow, I may say ouch or even stronger words occasionally, but that’s part of the beekeeping experience for me.  I’ve not perfected the no gloves approach as yet.  Maybe next year.

Cinema News

Lughnasa                                                                  Honey Moon

Criterion on Hulu* is finally streaming the World Cinema Foundation remastered films that they had licensing to and it’s also good because this means in the near future they will be releasing the films on DVD/Blu-ray! Just for context, a lot of these films are extremely important to their individual countries/to the non-western cinema in general.

Visiting the North

Lughnasa                                                         Honey Moon

The full Honey Moon has an amber cast tonight, appropriate for our work tomorrow and Wednesday.  Driving back from Wayzata it hung high in the sky, clouds passing before it.  It was warm, 80 degrees when I left the retreat center and the Woolly meeting there.

Tom showed a DVD from his trip to Svalbard.  It was a stark but beautiful land and sea and ice scape populated with curious polar bears, blubbery walrus and ring seals.  The ring seals only show up on this DVD as the meal of a large male bear.  The video of a polar bear suckling her cub was, according to a Swedish polar bear researcher, unique.  He’d never seen it before and, interestingly, said he never expected to see it again.

There was, too, the story of ocean open months earlier than normal, of the pack ice decline separating the polar bears from their main, almost exclusive food source, the ring seals and the staggering potential of upsetting the theromhaline cycle if Greenland melts. This could shut down the Gulf Stream with a cascade of unknown effects.

We went on from there to discuss superstitions and masculinity.  I had a sense that the conversation about masculinity per se, oddly a subject only lightly discussed among the Woollies over the years, might hold more for us at some other point.

It was, as always, good.

 

 

Getting Ready

Lughnasa                                                              Honey Moon

We’re beginning to get ready for honey extraction on Wednesday.  Kate’s making cloth LW-Pwr-Extractor-covers for the honey supers today and tomorrow we’ll get all the extraction equipment out of the shed and into the kitchen.  There we will lay down cardboard and plastic, arrange the uncapping tub, the filters, the plastic 5 gallon pail with the honeygate and stabilize the extractor’s triangular metal stand on wood.  After setting up the extractor itself and getting a speed that doesn’t send it skittering over the kitchen floor, we’ll be ready for the next step on Wednesday.

On Wednesday, after a final reading of the refractometer on the uncapped honey, we’ll go ahead with all frames unless there is not enough capped honey.  If there isn’t, we’ll only extract from the capped frames and put uncapped frames back on and do them later.  The issue is the water content of the honey.  Honey has to have less than 18% water to be honey, otherwise it ferments.

More on the Wednesday process later.

The Family That Sprays Together

Lughnasa                                                               Honey Moon

In what has become a Monday ritual I filled the green plastic sprayers with Qualify IMAG0762(vegetative) and Brix Blaster (reproductive) solutions and hit the garden well before 8 am.  There’s apparently something about plant physiology that makes between 4 am and 8 am the optimal time to spray.  The probability of me doing anything at 4 am is not high so I always run closer to 8.

After that I putzed around with Scrivener, trying to learn how to make the compiled version of Missing 3.1 look the way I want it to.  Compiling takes everything you have in a long document and gives it a uniform look and feel, chapter headings, font size, pagination, paragraph treatments.  It has a lot of parts and I don’t understand this aspect of the program as well I would like, but I finally got to a place I liked pretty well.

After printing out a single space version for Lonnie  Helgeson, I sent five pages to a copy editor for a sample rewrite.  He’s returned those pages already and I’ll review them tomorrow morning.

 

A Quiet Birthday

Lughnasa                                                                   Honey Moon

A quiet birthday as phone calls come in wishing the birthday girl well.  We had a long nap and have spent time reading after it.  Kate’s reading Orange Is The New Black, the prison2009 11 10_0592 memoir turned into a Netflix series which we watched a couple of weeks ago.  I’m reading Ninety Percent of Everything, a narrative about the merchant shipping industry.  After seven weeks of visiting ports throughout Latin America, I developed a strong curiosity about containers and container shipping.

This reading is a bit unusual since neither of us read a lot of non-fiction, leaning more toward mystery, thriller, fantasy and the classics.  I find I buy non-fiction and often leave it unread, or read it much later.

Later on tonight we plan to have a bonfire, a celebratory one, with sparklers and smores for Kate.

One More Step Along the Way

Lughnasa                                                                    Honey Moon

Finished entering Kate’s edits into the third revision of Missing, call it 3.1 right now.  Tomorrow I’m going to print out a copy for Lonnie, after jiggering with Scrivener so that it indicates chapters the way I want.

It’s time to pull out the information from that course I took back in March on finding an agent.  This is the step I’ve skipped so far and one I’m going to pursue with determination now.  If I have to do it, I’ll submit directly to publishers.  This book is of high enough quality to publish, I’m sure of it.  Now I have to find the connections to make that happen.

(woman_in_a_red_dress_by_jane_seymour)

It’s also time to pick up the research for Loki’s Children and get to work on that, too. I contacted Greg and told him I wanted to restart the Latin on October 4th and go until May 1st.  This is roughly the fallow season for our gardens and I’ll use it to advance my Latin skills as well writing Loki’s Children.  Looking forward to busy winter.