Our friend Josh shows how honey combs are uncapped. Bees cap the combs with wax to help preserve it - the wax must be cut off by machines like this one so the honey can come out. Josh was the master beekeeper on a Hutterite settlement in Manitoba. The Hutterites share work and profits equally in communities which they call colonies. Many of their Sunday sermons use the honey bee colony as an example of a harmonious, disciplined life style which can be emulated for successful and prosperous living.

 

Why We Love Honey...

We want to tell you just a little bit about HONEY, where it comes from, how bees make the stuff, and "Why We Love Honey"....


This young lady is filling a 670 pound barrel with honey. Much honey is exported to the world in big drums such as this one. The buyer, a honey packager, will filter this honey and put it into small consumer sized containers, then distribute it to retailers.


These big, round tanks are extractors, or centrifuge machines, which whirl the honey-combs around so the honey is separated from the wax comb. Most beekeepers use equipment similar to these extractors to produce the liquid honey which can be shipped in barrels.

 

 

Bee Photos

Comb Honey Page

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