Our glorious, fragrant honey is ready for bottling. Here’s how we got it off the frames and out of the combs.
We were so pleased to harvest any honey from our bees. It’s the our first year with these hives, and we had been warned the bees might not make enough honey to share with us.
But end-of-summer San Francisco Bay area is still a paradise with many blooming plants, and the nectar seems to keep flowing (I see many bees foraging at late blooming lavendar, catmint, and other plants in the neighborhoods around Sunset). We felt ok about pulling four frames of capped honey—honey in the combs, sealed with wax by the bees -and giving the bees new frames to fill. We shall see if they’ll draw out new comb at this late date in summer.
But in the meantime, we had four frames of honey to process. Each frame full of honey weighed about 8 pounds. One frame, the drone frame, has no foundation, so that honey can all be harvested with the comb (more on that in another post).