Gosh that Honey is so dark, and it's mind blowing that so much is held by so little wax in comparison. It sure makes you appreciate the the skill of these girls, and all the work they do even more.
As soon as you said girls I imagined all the bees with the blushing eyes anime girl on each of them as they buzz around. I’m dying. And high. Very high.
The bees worked hard to make the wax and honey, and I worked just as hard to process it....and it was worth all the effort. Thanks for watching. God's peace Suzanne. Mr. Ed
Enjoy the air up there and safe landings. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace
Lol, I was scanning the comments to see if anyone mentioned him! You're a looong way down the comment list! Thanks for confirming I'm not the only observant one around. Hahaha. I'm guessing he's not the typical though.
I wonder if the Monks would make a honey wheat bread now. Seems like a good idea. It could be sold at the gift shop or online with the honey you collect around the Abbey. Great job, Mr. Ed! Way to repurpose that old steam colander! God's Blessings to all at the Abbey🥰🥰🤗🤗🙏🙏
It is only on special occasions that the monks bake bread to sell, but I will say this, in the past they did use our honey to make the 9 grain bread that was sold. Unfortunately, it has been a few years since that has happened again. Always great hearing from you Susan, God's peace. Mr. Ed
I was sitting under my verandah in rural australia this morning watching the honeybees, native blue banded bees and butterflies working their way around my garden beds. I thought of Jeff and the guys enjoying watching the bees doing the same thing on the other side of the world. Im grateful that some of that nectar might eventually find it’s way to my table when I buy my honey at the next local farmers market.
Jay my friend, you are living the good life. Thank you for your thoughts and for all the time you take following along with my bee wrangling adventures. We are both blessed guys. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
No wonder you were struggling to lift that out of the RV onto the table! And yes, even in death those girls can sting. Thanks to both of you for the video. God Bless! -Jeff and Diane
I'm enjoying the honey you sent me with my coffee every day, thanks so much. Oh yea, tell Diane Mona just got an embroidering machine this weekend and can hardly wait to start using it. Thank you for your blessings and for watching. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff Wow! An embroidery machine! I had to look that up to see what they look like. I suppose it depends on the model, but I saw lots of different threads and bobbins. Looks like a challenge to run. We will have to get Mona and Diane together at NAHBE. I'm sure they will be self entertaining... :-) Glad you are enjoying the honey. See you in 6+ weeks! (That's a warning!) -Jeff
@@windyridgeapiaries I should have said what type it was, sorry for that. It's a Bai, 15 head embroidery machine. The cool thing is I'm going to have her start making some things for me to give away on my channel. I'm looking forward to seeing you guys in a few weeks as well, till then, God's peace Jeff. Mr. Ed
You appear to have yourself a large flock of happy healthy bees who in the end do enjoy the fruits of the prior work or ofther bees Mr. Ed! They have to be happy bees because you are not being chewed up as you sit among to coolers of comb remnants. Creativity appears to be one of your many tools, for as you mentioned, just looking around and you come up with a large colander and champaign tub! Even then the combination of colander and tub were heavily filled by comb and honey. Looks to be as though the weekend before Thanksgiving could be a very sweet one indeed! Thank you again for another fine story! -Bob...
@@WarmFuzzyVibes That does make perfect sense when you also look at how he and Good Time Charlie are so careful with his bee removals! Why I suppose that Mr. Ed could be seen as Louisiana's Bee Whisperer!!
Hi Jeff, thanks for the video. I use my apple cider press to squeeze the honey out. You can buy a so called honey gate (kind of spicket) online that you can put into the side of the champagne tub to easily get the honey out.
I was considering getting a press, but I still enjoy extracting the honey using my hands. Also, I do plan on putting a gate in the bucket, I just have not gotten around to it yet. Thanks for watching. Until the next one, God's peace Bert. Mr. Ed
You should use a cheese cloth to be able to double strain it and keep the wax bits from getting stuck in the holes of your colliander. I'd try to make a flat press so it's evenly squeezed to maximize the amount of honey you get too.
Many people, like myself, want honey that is unfiltered. Each time a filter is used in the refining process it removes active particles in the honey and those particles add to the benefits of raw honey. So for me, running the crushed honey through a rough filter to remove the majority of the wax is good enough. Thanks for watching. God's peace Stephanie. Mr. Ed
I rendered some old comb done this year. Old brood comb mostly. Out of all that dirt and mess I got some beautiful wax. I love seeing the beauty that lies beneath the ugly. Great lesson for life. Thank you for another great video.
I get a lot of honey from removals. Yesterday I got 50lbs. I feed all my removal honey to my bees because I don't like the fact that this comb also has a ton of stuff that isn't honey inside it. I use a paint mixer & a 5 gallon bucket. This actually works great and it takes a lot less time than hand crushing. I can break up the comb and walk away after putting it in a strainer.
Jeff,mi seen one of the very large honey operation that used a old Hobart commercial, meat grinder with a medium plate to crush the honey comb to extract the honey from the old comb. It breaks up the old hard comb and extracts the honey with ease.
@@JeffHorchoff Jeff, I saw it in the processing room at a honey company in Oklahoma, that I toured and they was crushing honey from wild bees. Aka cutouts As I said before they was using an old commercial Hobart meat grinder and was using the coarse medium grinder plates 1/2 inch holes. What was funny is the honey from the wild bees, they would package and sell in the health food store as wild honey taken from non domesticated bees. I asked them the difference and the comment was bees in a hive box are domesticated, and the wild honey is from bees that build where every they want, in trees, cars, houses. The owners of Ross honey company from Minco laughs about how the health food stores all want wild raw honey. He said for some reason the health food stores think the honey in the hives is not wild honey and are feed sugar water and chemicals. In one health food store they had a quart jar of honey that had beep parts and whole bees and crush honey comb, I had a heart attack when I saw the price tag of $45 dollars, and it was from a honey company in your home state from around Shreveport. The honey was dark and so was the comb.
Little bit of everything in this video. The cutout, wax refining, honey harvesting, and even bees swarming over your equipment. All we're missing is some splits and a Rooster cameo.
Being an outa door's kinda guy I've always enjoyed finding the wild honey. One year my side kick and I made an incredible find in a huge valley of banana yucca, in a cave filled with comb. That was a huge haul we made. And we had hardly put a dent in this cavern full of bee's. Nice find there, and I'm sure there's more out there for ya. Keep looking for it, God does provide
Great story, and I would have loved to taste the honey. Thanks for watching and I am going to keep looking. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Douglas. Mr. Ed
What a great tool! Who would have known that it would have to take a beekeeper to show the correct way to use it. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Donald. Mr. Ed
I watched this 7 months ago but I can't help but watch it again. And to see that even the film of honey that's left in your your buckets can be used by the bees.Awsome!!
I greatly appreciate you revisiting and watching again the video, but remember, each Friday I post a brand new video for your viewing entertainment. Until the next one, God's peace Linda. Mr. Ed
I think what is amazing to me is when you said you can get stung by a dead bee and so that is why you wear those super thick rubber gloves when you hand crush that comb!
Thank you very much for your blessings and gift, it is so generous of you to give them. Also, thanks so much for taking the time to follow along with my bee wrangling adventures. Until the next one, God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
And there in lies the rub. I have been looking for one for years with no luck so far. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Always enjoy seeing your different methods of extracting honey from the comb. You were able to get a lot of honey for the Abbey which is a blessing in itself. My favorite part is when you feed the bee's outside and just to sit amongst them and enjoy watching them feast. Thank you for another great video Mr Ed and Good Time Charlie. God Bless!!!!
Did you know that bees are healing? The sound and vibrations they give off are very healing! So you sitting there in between them was a great way to get some healing work done! 🤗🙌😇🐝🐝🐝🐝
Yes I did, I have read a few studies on the benefits of listening to bees, but as a beekeeper for over 40 years, I already knew most of what I read. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Here's the link to a video I made that's ALL about the sound of honey. Let me know what you think. Thanks for watching. God's peace Paige. Mr. Ed ruclips.net/video/hYCgQDswlIoM/видео.htmlr. Ed
And it's always a pleasure for me as well every time you visit, so glad you enjoyed watching. Thank you for doing that, and until the next time, God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
Before we had uncapping machines and extractors, it was the only way. Personally, I'm very happy to have machines to do the work, but I still enjoy doing it old school way. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Robyn. Mr. Ed
Have you ever tried a wine press? I have to imagine you can find one around the Abby worth cleaning up. Just the discovery and plan to refurbish such an item could make for a cool video. I enjoy what you do! I even learned a friend of mine over in Russia very much enjoys what and how you do what you do. Thank you
I have looked into a press for squeezing the honey, but to date, I have not found one large enough to handle the amount of wax I would put into it. I'm seriously considering building one just for the purpose, and that should make a really cool video. Thank you for spreading the news about my channel and for taking the time to follow along. Remember, I post a brand new video every Friday, and if that is not enough, there are over 600 more of them that have already been posted. God's peace. Mr. Ed
What a wonderful way to start my day, your vid was at the top of my 'favorites' list. I love your vids and always look forward to your new adventures. A special thank you to Charlie, your camera talents are the best. Now that the weather's getting unpredictable, stay well and safe driving. Thank you both, I'll keep on watching and wait for more vids.
I plan on going live real soon and you can ask your questions then. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
And I'm just happy you took the time to watch, thank you for that. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Dave. Mr. Ed
Not really, they both hold stuff. My use for it is just a bit sweeter. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
I may be wrong (of course!) but I think Wreck it Ralph was Mr. Ed's assistant in that other bee suit cause I saw a mustache. Probably Charlie was the camera man though.
Hey Irv, glad to see you dropping a comment AND a compliment, two rare occurrences. Thanks for doing both of those and for watching. Until the next one, God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
Jeff my thought on this wouldn't a old washing machine ringer.. you know the one that has the two rollers!. set at a certain angle feed in honey comb..... honey comb comes out toward top... liquid honey squeezes and falls to bottom. Comb comes out other side... like maybe molded plastic.... if not... and have a blade slicing and pulling comb off and putting in container. i believe an idea like this would save you more time and extract more honey from feral or other comb you have to squeeze by hand.. just saying... oh by the way my new supply of clover leaf honey has finally been processed as soon as i can get a good jar i will send you some take care see you later.
I have been looking for one of those rollers for years and have yet to find one. I'd love to experiment with that very idea. Looking forward to tasting the new batch with my coffee. Thanks for watching. God's peace Gary. Mr. Ed
If you liked the way that block of wax looked like, check out my next weeks post on how I get it to look like that. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Rocky. Mr. Ed
I call those 'horse buckets' cause I always see them in videos and around horse barns and stuff. I have one about that size for most of my gardening supplies.
Loved the original video! I was worried you hurt your back lifting that board with all the honey. Good to see that you use everything you can and then give back to the bees. God bless.
Thank you for your blessings, concern, and for taking the time to watch the videos, it is all greatly appreciated. Until the next one, God's peace Brenda. Mr. ed
I'm wondering, would you be able to use an old style washer wringer to squeeze the honey out of the comb? If it squeezes water out of clothes, it SHOULD be able to squeeze honey out of comb, right? You can still buy new ones at stores that supply Amish communities and homesteaders who live off grid.
When I feed bees honey I do so through internal feeders as this is the safest way not to promote robbing. Generally, I use a quart jar with small holes punched into the lid and place it over the hole in the inner cover. After that, I place a shallow super on the inner cover and then then the telescoping cover on the shallow box. A very simple, safe method. Thanks for watching. God's peace Brian. Mr. Ed
What a difference in calmness those bees were as opposed to if they were Africanised bees. I was slightly hoping to see the transfer of these bees into their new home hives. Ah well one can’t have everything in life I suppose!! Thanks Mr Ed for a delightful video and much enjoyed here in the UK.
It would be interesting to weigh the wax before and after the bees clean it up. I'd guess the bees cleaned up another 5 lbs of honey off the wax. My bees will actually take the wax as well! (waste not want not)
That is what you call a bucket full of Honey. Wish I was 25:41 down your way to taste it. L OL. Unfortunately Im home bound up Norh here, but you folks there keep me happy being able to see your country down there. Take care my friend and keep the great videos coming. God Blesss
Thank you for your blessings, kind words, and taking the time to watch my bee wrangling adventures, it is all greatly appreciated. God's peace Greg. Mr. Ed
Actually, it's not a job. After all, I'm jut a volunteer living the good life. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
What kind of gloves are those that the bees can't sting through Jeff? They don't look like just regular dish washing gloves. Would like to get me a pair of those. Great haul of honey on that one!
The gloves are made by Wells Lamont and I get them from Amazon for about 7 bucks. They are PVC coated and rubber lined which makes them great sting protectors. Thanks for watching. God's peace Carole. Mr. Ed
Hi Geoff. Like to suggest you get a fine mesh basket to put into the kettle to capture all that muck left over from the rendering. It would make your life so much easier when it comes to cleaning
Great idea! I'm going to see what I can do to make that happen. Thanks for the suggestion and for watching. Until the next one, God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
I actually have one now and plan on installing it before the next time I do this, it will really help. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
I have started, on outdoor cutouts, using a brush to sweep bees off of combs and onto the brood pile or into the box. Saves vacuum time by piling them up or skipping vacuuming them all together. My vac arm doesn't get so tired either. Much faster overall. Why didn't I think of this years ago.🤔
@@taddrienstra7247 What happens when you are wrangling stays there....except for the bees and honey. Hey, are you going to Kaymon's Expo this year? If so, I'll see you there.God's peace brother
That they are. They certainly work harder than I do, but then there are a lot more of them than me. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Keith. Mr. Ed
Thank you so much for your blessings, I love receiving them. It's a joy for me to share my bee wrangling experiences, thank you for taking the time to follow along. God's peace Dyana. Mr. Ed
Good evening Jeff, mug up from New Hampshire. Bees were out flying the last 2 days...no more, cold and well cold till spring, it should be. Let's see some bees!! Yup! That's some bees🐝🐝🐝🐝
Bee careful with those champagne bucket handles- the are only anchored by the mushrooming of the heat treated rope ends. I've had them fail on me. I put some nail/staples in the ends to keep them from them pulling through the holes.
I know it's pretty easy to add a water spigot to the side of those tubs, not sure if you'd need a heavier duty/larger bore spigot for honey; but it may be available. If you wanted to put it on the bottom , you'd get more drainage, but then will always need to set it on a stand of some sort (or attach it to high enough castors/legs/etc.
I now have a honey spigot to add to the basket. Next time you see the basket, you will see the newly added spigot. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
Question. When you put the equipment with the honey residue out on the porch for the bees to clean, how far and wide do you think the bees come from to get the leftovers, feet, yards, or miles.
All three, after all, it's a free buffet. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace
Thank you very much and thank you for taking the time to watch them. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
I was looking forward to this one. Is this the largest bee removal you have done Mr. Ed? I must say I envy the lifestyle you and Mona have. You visit some great locations and what is better than working for bees and the Abbey. You and are such a good team. Tku ad sending blessings.
No, it was not the largest removal I have done, but it certainly is right up there. Thank you so much for your blessings, kind words, and taking the time to follow along with my crazy adventures, it is all greatly appreciated. Until the next one, God's peace Mary. Mr. Ed
Very possible, but there's just something about squeezing honey comb by hand. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my over 600 bee wrangling/ bee rescue adventure videos and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace James. Mr. Ed
I have seen an old meat grinder ( hamburger ) used to crush the honey comb in and it does a great job - no splatter mess like you could get with a drill and paint mixer.
I'd love to give that a try, my concern would be the wax build up in the gears. I know from past experience with honey pumps, the wax built up between the gears and stopped the pump. Still, I like the idea. Thanks for sharing it and for watching. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
I know a press would work, and I'm glad to hear it would, still, I do enjoy working the comb this way and sharing the left over honey with the bees. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Kathy. Mr. Ed
Wow! Fantastic! What a huge blessing even though they were a nuisance for a while! It’s great that you were able to feed them so much of “leftover “ honey! I imagine there isn’t a lot of natural resources available at this time of year. Thanks for sharing! Great videos of the entire rescue!
I do not. Whatever honey is left after a day of draining, the bees get to enjoy that. It's very important to remember that the bees need the honey to survive on, I just want it to enjoy, and for that reason, any honey that is taken from a hive has to be surplus honey and not survival honey. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Ray. Mr. Ed
I wish I could get one of those, I'd like to do the very same thing. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Lisle. Mr. Ed
I love watching you work with the bees and associated byproducts. By the way Jeff, I am sure you can buy gates for use with your muck buckets ( thats what we call them ). The gates (spigots) come with rubber washers for both sides.
Glad to hear you enjoyed the video, thanks for watching. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Lois. Mr. Ed
I wonder if a new clothes wringer or hand wringer would have worked. Just set up the wringer over the strainer and then run the comb through the wringer. All the honey gets squeezed out and the wax gets smashed together into a thin strip. Just wondering?
It is a possibility, and I have been looking for one to try it for years. Still, no luck in procuring one. Who knows, maybe some day I will come across one. Thanks for watching. God's peace Dave. Mr. Ed
Actually, it's from a coffee maker from the Army Surplus. Monks bought a lot of stuff from them and this is just one of the many gems. Thanks for watching. God's peace. Mr. Ed
a bee feeding frenzy!! an idea for Br. Joseph. maybe use some of the honey you get from the bees to make a bread recipe that uses honey in it? or do they already do that?
They have done that very thing from time to time. They have some of our honey in the bakery and use it on special runs for the helpers and themselves. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Troy. Mr. Ed
Is the limit to the number of bees that can go into the vacuum based of physical space or the amount of heat they generate? Can the bees overheat if confined too long?
For me, space is the determining factor. If the bees have enough space in the vacuum body and it is vented, heat build up should not be an issue....unless it's really hot outside. Bees can die if they are overheated. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
You are very welcome, and I have to say how much I appreciate your love for bees as they are so important to our very survival. Also, thank you for discovering my channel and watching the content I produce each week. Until the next one, God's peace JK. Mr. Ed
I agree with you on getting more of the honey, and yet at the same time, I love giving the bees the opportunity to clean up the wax and collect the honey for their hive as well. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Michael. Mr. Ed
I think you could, and I have already looked into that idea, I simply have not followed through yet. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace. Mr. Ed
I'm sorry to report some bad news to you Rocky, they do not sell the bread. They only give it away to the food banks and shelters in our area. Even though there are many request for it, it is only given away. Thanks for watching. God's peace brother. Mr. Ed
I love that the hens are following you!! ❤️❤️ You live in heaven on earth!
Those chickens are just so cool! Thanks for watching. God's peace Heather.
Mr. Ed
Gosh that Honey is so dark, and it's mind blowing that so much is held by so little wax in comparison. It sure makes you appreciate the the skill of these girls, and all the work they do even more.
As soon as you said girls I imagined all the bees with the blushing eyes anime girl on each of them as they buzz around. I’m dying. And high. Very high.
The bees worked hard to make the wax and honey, and I worked just as hard to process it....and it was worth all the effort. Thanks for watching. God's peace Suzanne.
Mr. Ed
Enjoy the air up there and safe landings. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace
It always looks dark when you have that much
So, the liquid bug inards drain down with the honey? 🫣
The hive was the most valuable part of that RV.
No doubt it was, if only I was worth as much. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchofflol 😂 be careful Mr. Ed. question, are they "Africanized" bees? aka "killer bees"? Have you guys ever encountered them?;
Lol that monk's a real beefcake. Looks like a great place to work and bee.
Great video!
Lol, I was scanning the comments to see if anyone mentioned him! You're a looong way down the comment list! Thanks for confirming I'm not the only observant one around. Hahaha. I'm guessing he's not the typical though.
I'll pass along your comment to Brother Joseph, it will make him laugh. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoffI noticed 2 in another video, thought it was near Halloween 😂. Sorry!
They are pumping iron in that monastery!
@@Peekul1 well those bags of flour and sugar and salt, all that mixing, loaves and hot pans get heavy 😜
I wonder if the Monks would make a honey wheat bread now. Seems like a good idea. It could be sold at the gift shop or online with the honey you collect around the Abbey.
Great job, Mr. Ed! Way to repurpose that old steam colander!
God's Blessings to all at the Abbey🥰🥰🤗🤗🙏🙏
It is only on special occasions that the monks bake bread to sell, but I will say this, in the past they did use our honey to make the 9 grain bread that was sold. Unfortunately, it has been a few years since that has happened again. Always great hearing from you Susan, God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Thank you for sharing your beekeeping adventures, I’m always learning
You are very welcome, and I'm very appreciative that you take the time to follow along, thanks for watching. Until the next one. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
I was sitting under my verandah in rural australia this morning watching the honeybees, native blue banded bees and butterflies working their way around my garden beds. I thought of Jeff and the guys enjoying watching the bees doing the same thing on the other side of the world. Im grateful that some of that nectar might eventually find it’s way to my table when I buy my honey at the next local farmers market.
Jay my friend, you are living the good life. Thank you for your thoughts and for all the time you take following along with my bee wrangling adventures. We are both blessed guys. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
No wonder you were struggling to lift that out of the RV onto the table! And yes, even in death those girls can sting. Thanks to both of you for the video. God Bless! -Jeff and Diane
I'm enjoying the honey you sent me with my coffee every day, thanks so much. Oh yea, tell Diane Mona just got an embroidering machine this weekend and can hardly wait to start using it. Thank you for your blessings and for watching. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff Wow! An embroidery machine! I had to look that up to see what they look like. I suppose it depends on the model, but I saw lots of different threads and bobbins. Looks like a challenge to run. We will have to get Mona and Diane together at NAHBE. I'm sure they will be self entertaining... :-) Glad you are enjoying the honey. See you in 6+ weeks! (That's a warning!) -Jeff
@@windyridgeapiaries I should have said what type it was, sorry for that. It's a Bai, 15 head embroidery machine. The cool thing is I'm going to have her start making some things for me to give away on my channel. I'm looking forward to seeing you guys in a few weeks as well, till then, God's peace Jeff.
Mr. Ed
You appear to have yourself a large flock of happy healthy bees who in the end do enjoy the fruits of the prior work or ofther bees Mr. Ed! They have to be happy bees because you are not being chewed up as you sit among to coolers of comb remnants. Creativity appears to be one of your many tools, for as you mentioned, just looking around and you come up with a large colander and champaign tub! Even then the combination of colander and tub were heavily filled by comb and honey. Looks to be as though the weekend before Thanksgiving could be a very sweet one indeed! Thank you again for another fine story! -Bob...
I think the bees actually can recognize certain people and Mr. Ed is probably one person they look forward to seeing because he brings the goodies!
@@WarmFuzzyVibes That does make perfect sense when you also look at how he and Good Time Charlie are so careful with his bee removals! Why I suppose that Mr. Ed could be seen as Louisiana's Bee Whisperer!!
Hi Jeff, thanks for the video. I use my apple cider press to squeeze the honey out. You can buy a so called honey gate (kind of spicket) online that you can put into the side of the champagne tub to easily get the honey out.
I was considering getting a press, but I still enjoy extracting the honey using my hands. Also, I do plan on putting a gate in the bucket, I just have not gotten around to it yet. Thanks for watching. Until the next one, God's peace Bert.
Mr. Ed
You should use a cheese cloth to be able to double strain it and keep the wax bits from getting stuck in the holes of your colliander. I'd try to make a flat press so it's evenly squeezed to maximize the amount of honey you get too.
Many people, like myself, want honey that is unfiltered. Each time a filter is used in the refining process it removes active particles in the honey and those particles add to the benefits of raw honey. So for me, running the crushed honey through a rough filter to remove the majority of the wax is good enough. Thanks for watching. God's peace Stephanie.
Mr. Ed
I rendered some old comb done this year. Old brood comb mostly. Out of all that dirt and mess I got some beautiful wax. I love seeing the beauty that lies beneath the ugly. Great lesson for life. Thank you for another great video.
True that!
I get a lot of honey from removals. Yesterday I got 50lbs. I feed all my removal honey to my bees because I don't like the fact that this comb also has a ton of stuff that isn't honey inside it.
I use a paint mixer & a 5 gallon bucket. This actually works great and it takes a lot less time than hand crushing. I can break up the comb and walk away after putting it in a strainer.
Like you, most of the removal honey goes to the bees, but I still leave some for the monks as well. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
"It was so cool; I knew It would have a purpose for me one day" I love it! 🤗 Thanks Jeff
Jeff,mi seen one of the very large honey operation that used a old Hobart commercial, meat grinder with a medium plate to crush the honey comb to extract the honey from the old comb. It breaks up the old hard comb and extracts the honey with ease.
Yes, that sounds effective and fairly non-messy.
Remember he has repurposed several items that were on the scrap pile. The colander, the wax melter and I think were a couple of other items.
@@danrossell6375 yes I know, but you are off topic.
I you ever got the URL for that video of wax crushing, I'd love to see it! Thanks for watching. God's peace Raymond.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff Jeff, I saw it in the processing room at a honey company in Oklahoma, that I toured and they was crushing honey from wild bees. Aka cutouts As I said before they was using an old commercial Hobart meat grinder and was using the coarse medium grinder plates 1/2 inch holes.
What was funny is the honey from the wild bees, they would package and sell in the health food store as wild honey taken from non domesticated bees. I asked them the difference and the comment was bees in a hive box are domesticated, and the wild honey is from bees that build where every they want, in trees, cars, houses.
The owners of Ross honey company from Minco laughs about how the health food stores all want wild raw honey. He said for some reason the health food stores think the honey in the hives is not wild honey and are feed sugar water and chemicals.
In one health food store they had a quart jar of honey that had beep parts and whole bees and crush honey comb, I had a heart attack when I saw the price tag of $45 dollars, and it was from a honey company in your home state from around Shreveport. The honey was dark and so was the comb.
Little bit of everything in this video. The cutout, wax refining, honey harvesting, and even bees swarming over your equipment. All we're missing is some splits and a Rooster cameo.
Just another day of be wrangling....and no Rooster in sight. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Being an outa door's kinda guy I've always enjoyed finding the wild honey. One year my side kick and I made an incredible find in a huge valley of banana yucca, in a cave filled with comb. That was a huge haul we made. And we had hardly put a dent in this cavern full of bee's.
Nice find there, and I'm sure there's more out there for ya. Keep looking for it, God does provide
Great story, and I would have loved to taste the honey. Thanks for watching and I am going to keep looking. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Douglas.
Mr. Ed
I found one of those coffee pot strainers, much smaller of course, at the Salvation Army store, I use it in my solar wax melter.
What a great tool! Who would have known that it would have to take a beekeeper to show the correct way to use it. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Donald.
Mr. Ed
I watched this 7 months ago but I can't help but watch it again. And to see that even the film of honey that's left in your your buckets can be used by the bees.Awsome!!
I greatly appreciate you revisiting and watching again the video, but remember, each Friday I post a brand new video for your viewing entertainment. Until the next one, God's peace Linda.
Mr. Ed
I think what is amazing to me is when you said you can get stung by a dead bee and so that is why you wear those super thick rubber gloves when you hand crush that comb!
RECYCLING to the MAX! Good job there, Palley! Your helper was sure enjoying the fruits of your labor! Have a Jesus weekend and God Bless ALL Yall!
Gersh! just look at all them bees! Mmm, mmm, good! Have some hunny for me! Thank you for sharing with us Jeff! Blessings to all~
Always enjoy your videos and seeing you work with a big smile on! God bless you and the good people you work with!
Thank you very much for your blessings and gift, it is so generous of you to give them. Also, thanks so much for taking the time to follow along with my bee wrangling adventures. Until the next one, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Watching you two pour the honey into the buckets, was my ASMR, for today👍💕🙏
Delighted to provide the entertainment, thanks so much for watching. Until the next one, God's peace.
Mr. Ed
You need an old-fashioned laundry mangle to crush the comb. Good luck in finding one.
And there in lies the rub. I have been looking for one for years with no luck so far. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Always enjoy seeing your different methods of extracting honey from the comb. You were able to get a lot of honey for the Abbey which is a blessing in itself. My favorite part is when you feed the bee's outside and just to sit amongst them and enjoy watching them feast. Thank you for another great video Mr Ed and Good Time Charlie. God Bless!!!!
Feeding back the scraps is always best! Thanks Jeff!!
Amazing Brother, I was looking forward to this video. Thx again and have a blessed day Mr. Ed.
Did you know that bees are healing? The sound and vibrations they give off are very healing! So you sitting there in between them was a great way to get some healing work done! 🤗🙌😇🐝🐝🐝🐝
Yes I did, I have read a few studies on the benefits of listening to bees, but as a beekeeper for over 40 years, I already knew most of what I read. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Talk about ASMR lol. The sound of the honey draining from the comb 😊😊😊
Here's the link to a video I made that's ALL about the sound of honey. Let me know what you think. Thanks for watching. God's peace Paige.
Mr. Ed
ruclips.net/video/hYCgQDswlIoM/видео.htmlr. Ed
Always a pleasure coming to the channel and seeing the progress. Thanks for another great video.
And it's always a pleasure for me as well every time you visit, so glad you enjoyed watching. Thank you for doing that, and until the next time, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
THANK YOU ! I'm bedfast now so my beekeeping is vicariously done through you !
I'm happy to bee here for you John, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Brilliant... love the scale of doing it this way. I guess this is how it was done historically ?
Before we had uncapping machines and extractors, it was the only way. Personally, I'm very happy to have machines to do the work, but I still enjoy doing it old school way. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Robyn.
Mr. Ed
Have you ever tried a wine press? I have to imagine you can find one around the Abby worth cleaning up.
Just the discovery and plan to refurbish such an item could make for a cool video.
I enjoy what you do! I even learned a friend of mine over in Russia very much enjoys what and how you do what you do.
Thank you
I have looked into a press for squeezing the honey, but to date, I have not found one large enough to handle the amount of wax I would put into it. I'm seriously considering building one just for the purpose, and that should make a really cool video. Thank you for spreading the news about my channel and for taking the time to follow along. Remember, I post a brand new video every Friday, and if that is not enough, there are over 600 more of them that have already been posted. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
What a wonderful way to start my day, your vid was at the top of my 'favorites' list. I love your vids and always look forward to your new adventures. A special thank you to Charlie, your camera talents are the best. Now that the weather's getting unpredictable, stay well and safe driving. Thank you both, I'll keep on watching and wait for more vids.
You're looking good, has the sheep shearer been around. I wish you had a video where we could ask you questions!!
I plan on going live real soon and you can ask your questions then. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
I never thought I'd be fascinated to watch a man of God making macaroni and cheese noises.
And I'm just happy you took the time to watch, thank you for that. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Dave.
Mr. Ed
Wow, that's alot of honey! 🍯
Great video Mr. Ed. Thanks for sharing.
Sending positive vibes and blessings from Northern Indiana 🙏
LOL, horse people call your “champagne bucket” a “muck bucket”. Totally different purpose!
Not really, they both hold stuff. My use for it is just a bit sweeter. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
i love the honey collection vids mr. ed!!!!!!!
And I love making them, thanks for watching. Until the next one, God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Great Video!! You are one hard working man my brother!! You and Charlie make a great bee team.
I may be wrong (of course!) but I think Wreck it Ralph was Mr. Ed's assistant in that other bee suit cause I saw a mustache. Probably Charlie was the camera man though.
Hey Irv, glad to see you dropping a comment AND a compliment, two rare occurrences. Thanks for doing both of those and for watching. Until the next one, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
You know you have so many Bees from that hive I'm wondering if you could get a couple Queen Bees 🐝 to start another couple of hives.
I realize that, and next Spring I will be doing exactly what you suggested. God's peace Ray.
Mr. Ed
Watching your videos just makes my day. I also get to learn too. Thank you Mr. Ed.
Amazing work, that lovely dark honey yum yum , keep up the great content Mr Ed🤩
I enjoy watching you rescue bees as well, you keep up the good work as well. Until the next one, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
❤@@JeffHorchoff
Jeff my thought on this wouldn't a old washing machine ringer.. you know the one that has the two rollers!. set at a certain angle feed in honey comb..... honey comb comes out toward top... liquid honey squeezes and falls to bottom. Comb comes out other side... like maybe molded plastic.... if not... and have a blade slicing and pulling comb off and putting in container. i believe an idea like this would save you more time and extract more honey from feral or other comb you have to squeeze by hand.. just saying... oh by the way my new supply of clover leaf honey has finally been processed as soon as i can get a good jar i will send you some take care see you later.
I have been looking for one of those rollers for years and have yet to find one. I'd love to experiment with that very idea. Looking forward to tasting the new batch with my coffee. Thanks for watching. God's peace Gary.
Mr. Ed
Afternoon Mr. Jeff that round block of wax made me hungry when u pulled it out the bucket to me it looked like cornbread
If you liked the way that block of wax looked like, check out my next weeks post on how I get it to look like that. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Rocky.
Mr. Ed
Thanks Mr Ed, that was very interesting to watch and it amazes me how the bees do all the cleanup afterward.
Jeff you and your friends never cease to amaze us. Bless you all.
I call those 'horse buckets' cause I always see them in videos and around horse barns and stuff. I have one about that size for most of my gardening supplies.
Loved the original video! I was worried you hurt your back lifting that board with all the honey. Good to see that you use everything you can and then give back to the bees. God bless.
Thank you for your blessings, concern, and for taking the time to watch the videos, it is all greatly appreciated. Until the next one, God's peace Brenda.
Mr. ed
I'm wondering, would you be able to use an old style washer wringer to squeeze the honey out of the comb? If it squeezes water out of clothes, it SHOULD be able to squeeze honey out of comb, right? You can still buy new ones at stores that supply Amish communities and homesteaders who live off grid.
I have been looking for one for years but have never found it. Thanks for watching and for the lead in getting one. God's peace Julie.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff Lehman's in Ohio sells them and ships all over the country.😉
Another great 👍 video. Thanks for sharing 👍 how do you feed Honey to your bee's the liquid Honey ? Thanks 😊
When I feed bees honey I do so through internal feeders as this is the safest way not to promote robbing. Generally, I use a quart jar with small holes punched into the lid and place it over the hole in the inner cover. After that, I place a shallow super on the inner cover and then then the telescoping cover on the shallow box. A very simple, safe method. Thanks for watching. God's peace Brian.
Mr. Ed
Do you mix water and honey or just honey in your feeder thanks for taking the time to answer my questions 😊
What a difference in calmness those bees were as opposed to if they were Africanised bees. I was slightly hoping to see the transfer of these bees into their new home hives. Ah well one can’t have everything in life I suppose!! Thanks Mr Ed for a delightful video and much enjoyed here in the UK.
It would be interesting to weigh the wax before and after the bees clean it up. I'd guess the bees cleaned up another 5 lbs of honey off the wax. My bees will actually take the wax as well! (waste not want not)
Our bees take some of the wax as well, but they will take ALL the honey. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
That is what you call a bucket full of Honey. Wish I was 25:41 down your way to taste it. L OL. Unfortunately Im home bound up Norh here, but you folks there keep me happy being able to see your country down there. Take care my friend and keep the great videos coming. God Blesss
Thank you for your blessings, kind words, and taking the time to watch my bee wrangling adventures, it is all greatly appreciated. God's peace Greg.
Mr. Ed
You have such a fun job! Thanks for sharing
Actually, it's not a job. After all, I'm jut a volunteer living the good life. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
@JeffHorchoff lucky and blessed nonetheless 🙏 💖
What kind of gloves are those that the bees can't sting through Jeff? They don't look like just regular dish washing gloves. Would like to get me a pair of those.
Great haul of honey on that one!
The gloves are made by Wells Lamont and I get them from Amazon for about 7 bucks. They are PVC coated and rubber lined which makes them great sting protectors. Thanks for watching. God's peace Carole.
Mr. Ed
Hi Geoff. Like to suggest you get a fine mesh basket to put into the kettle to capture all that muck left over from the rendering. It would make your life so much easier when it comes to cleaning
Great idea! I'm going to see what I can do to make that happen. Thanks for the suggestion and for watching. Until the next one, God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
I believe you can buy those gates at a beer and wine making supply store.
I actually have one now and plan on installing it before the next time I do this, it will really help. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
I have started, on outdoor cutouts, using a brush to sweep bees off of combs and onto the brood pile or into the box. Saves vacuum time by piling them up or skipping vacuuming them all together. My vac arm doesn't get so tired either. Much faster overall. Why didn't I think of this years ago.🤔
I can't believer the "swarm king" is now a bee wrangler, way to go Tadd! God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff many hundreds and hundreds, some in places Mrs. Doesn't even want to know about they are so crazy.
@@taddrienstra7247 What happens when you are wrangling stays there....except for the bees and honey. Hey, are you going to Kaymon's Expo this year? If so, I'll see you there.God's peace brother
@@JeffHorchoff Yes, I will be there. Looking forward to seeing you again my friend. Much to catch up on.
I was thinking, it's the bees who are always making more! Wonderful!
That they are. They certainly work harder than I do, but then there are a lot more of them than me. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Keith.
Mr. Ed
Thanks for taking us along with you. God bless.
Thank you so much for your blessings, I love receiving them. It's a joy for me to share my bee wrangling experiences, thank you for taking the time to follow along. God's peace Dyana.
Mr. Ed
Hi mr Ed.. Nice lot if honey. Well done
Thank you Charlie !!!
On the jars, You should call this honey Trailer trash honey, because the bees lived in a trailer 😀
Good evening Jeff, mug up from New Hampshire. Bees were out flying the last 2 days...no more, cold and well cold till spring, it should be. Let's see some bees!! Yup! That's some bees🐝🐝🐝🐝
Jeff, this sure beats carrying mail! LOL
Every day of the week. Thanks for watching. God's peace Bernard.
Mr. Ed
Bee careful with those champagne bucket handles- the are only anchored by the mushrooming of the heat treated rope ends. I've had them fail on me. I put some nail/staples in the ends to keep them from them pulling through the holes.
Great idea, thanks for the heads up and for taking the time to watch the video. Until the next one, God's peace.
Mr. Ed
I know it's pretty easy to add a water spigot to the side of those tubs, not sure if you'd need a heavier duty/larger bore spigot for honey; but it may be available. If you wanted to put it on the bottom , you'd get more drainage, but then will always need to set it on a stand of some sort (or attach it to high enough castors/legs/etc.
I now have a honey spigot to add to the basket. Next time you see the basket, you will see the newly added spigot. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Great job from watching yall if I had a suit I would probably try to do a cut out.
Question. When you put the equipment with the honey residue out on the porch for the bees to clean, how far and wide do you think the bees come from to get the leftovers, feet, yards, or miles.
All three, after all, it's a free buffet. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace
Love you're videos sir
Thank you very much and thank you for taking the time to watch them. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
wow thet is a lot of honey god bless u mr, ed
I was looking forward to this one. Is this the largest bee removal you have done Mr. Ed? I must say I envy the lifestyle you and Mona have. You visit some great locations and what is better than working for bees and the Abbey. You and are such a good team. Tku ad sending blessings.
No, it was not the largest removal I have done, but it certainly is right up there. Thank you so much for your blessings, kind words, and taking the time to follow along with my crazy adventures, it is all greatly appreciated. Until the next one, God's peace Mary.
Mr. Ed
Sounds like a old type of coffee ☕️ pot for sure.
WWII issue. They got it from Army Surplus years ago. God's peace Ray.
Mr. Ed
That block of land looks good got a xterra pro yet.
Still using the hand held Sony, old faithful. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
Late summer and fall removals!! Wow they yield a lot of honey and that colony was huge!!
You would have loved to bee a part of this one.....well, maybe not. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
I wonder if you could have tossed the comb into your wax separator with the "ninja knives" installed. I bet it would make short work of the comb
Very possible, but there's just something about squeezing honey comb by hand. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my over 600 bee wrangling/ bee rescue adventure videos and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace James.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff Oh I watch often Mr. Ed. I am in Louisiana. Thank you for such great videos
That entire wrangle and harvest was huge. I wonder what the record is? Have a great weekend Jeff
This was not my largest wrangling or honey haul, but it is right up there. Happy Thanksgiving Joey and God's peace.
Mr. Ed
I have seen an old meat grinder ( hamburger ) used to crush the honey comb in and it does a great job - no splatter mess like you could get with a drill and paint mixer.
I'd love to give that a try, my concern would be the wax build up in the gears. I know from past experience with honey pumps, the wax built up between the gears and stopped the pump. Still, I like the idea. Thanks for sharing it and for watching. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
I use a press. It’s a lot more work; I think it renders more product when dealing with old, rigid comb. Thoughts?
I know a press would work, and I'm glad to hear it would, still, I do enjoy working the comb this way and sharing the left over honey with the bees. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
A Grape crusher across that coarse filter would speed your honey collection up, into your bucket!🤠
I agree, and I'm looking at a cider crusher right now. Thanks for your suggestion and for watching. God's peace Stanley.
Mr. Ed
I absolutely am humble d by your videos and how you make sure everything is used to God's greatest use!❤
Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Kathy.
Mr. Ed
Wow! Fantastic! What a huge blessing even though they were a nuisance for a while! It’s great that you were able to feed them so much of “leftover “ honey! I imagine there isn’t a lot of natural resources available at this time of year. Thanks for sharing! Great videos of the entire rescue!
Sounds like a coffee pot Percolating.
So when you get the honey comb in that strainer do you go back through and try to get more honey 🍯 Squeezed out trough the strainer.
I do not. Whatever honey is left after a day of draining, the bees get to enjoy that. It's very important to remember that the bees need the honey to survive on, I just want it to enjoy, and for that reason, any honey that is taken from a hive has to be surplus honey and not survival honey. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Ray.
Mr. Ed
I've seen bee keepers use old washing mashine wringers to crush the honey out.
I wish I could get one of those, I'd like to do the very same thing. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Lisle.
Mr. Ed
I love watching you work with the bees and associated byproducts. By the way Jeff, I am sure you can buy gates for use with your muck buckets ( thats what we call them ). The gates (spigots) come with rubber washers for both sides.
Nice video, thank you.
Glad to hear you enjoyed the video, thanks for watching. Also, I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Lois.
Mr. Ed
I wonder if a new clothes wringer or hand wringer would have worked. Just set up the wringer over the strainer and then run the comb through the wringer. All the honey gets squeezed out and the wax gets smashed together into a thin strip. Just wondering?
It is a possibility, and I have been looking for one to try it for years. Still, no luck in procuring one. Who knows, maybe some day I will come across one. Thanks for watching. God's peace Dave.
Mr. Ed
That is one big old steamer basket. I'd imagine it's from a restaurant that did seafood boils.
Actually, it's from a coffee maker from the Army Surplus. Monks bought a lot of stuff from them and this is just one of the many gems. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
@@JeffHorchoff Whoo-ee, somebody was making coffee by the barrel then.
a bee feeding frenzy!! an idea for Br. Joseph. maybe use some of the honey you get from the bees to make a bread recipe that uses honey in it? or do they already do that?
They have done that very thing from time to time. They have some of our honey in the bakery and use it on special runs for the helpers and themselves. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Troy.
Mr. Ed
Is the limit to the number of bees that can go into the vacuum based of physical space or the amount of heat they generate? Can the bees overheat if confined too long?
For me, space is the determining factor. If the bees have enough space in the vacuum body and it is vented, heat build up should not be an issue....unless it's really hot outside. Bees can die if they are overheated. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
@JeffHorchoff, I'm curious, have you ever tried running comb through a meat grinder to separate the wax and honey?
I never have, but I may be trying that in the future, stay tuned. Thanks for watching. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Now that’s a lot of honey 🍯 my friend doing the lords work stay safe God bless cheers from Haiti 🇭🇹 👍🏾🤙🏾
Thanks for the blessings, kind words, and for taking the time to follow along. now go get turnt! God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed
😋😋😋😋🍯🍯🍯🍯🐝🐝🐝🐝 I am such a bee lover. Your videos are very informative Mr. Ed. Thank you
You are very welcome, and I have to say how much I appreciate your love for bees as they are so important to our very survival. Also, thank you for discovering my channel and watching the content I produce each week. Until the next one, God's peace JK.
Mr. Ed
i would take it well it is still hot and put it in a wine press and you might be surprised at how much more wax is still in it
I agree with you on getting more of the honey, and yet at the same time, I love giving the bees the opportunity to clean up the wax and collect the honey for their hive as well. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace Michael.
Mr. Ed
Potato macher?! Old style! The farm and the animal is lovely!🐝🕊❤🇸🇪
Don't know if the potato masher would work, but it may. Great hearing from you Barbro. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Couldn't you use an apple press to extract more of that honey from the crushed honeycomb??
I think you could, and I have already looked into that idea, I simply have not followed through yet. Thanks for watching, and I hope you will check out more of my bee wrangling/ bee rescues adventures and let me know what you think of them. By the way, I post a new video every Friday morning, and I look forward to hearing from you again soon. God's peace.
Mr. Ed
Mr. Jeff how can I go about ordering some of the Monks bread, could I get it packaged and shipped out to Az.
I'm sorry to report some bad news to you Rocky, they do not sell the bread. They only give it away to the food banks and shelters in our area. Even though there are many request for it, it is only given away. Thanks for watching. God's peace brother.
Mr. Ed