Есть такое понятие смотреть на огонь воду.А я вот смотрю как ЛЮДИ ВКАЛЫВАЮТ.ОНИ Созидают Полезное Обществу Делают Спасибо вам огромное 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👏👏👏👏👏✊🙏❤️ Вы великие ТРУДЯГИ
I can see you just sitting and listening and watching the whole operation start up. Making sure there are no problems and enjoying a sense of satisfaction. Good job.
Ian, amazing with my 4 backyard hives and my hand extractor I would love to have such an operation. You are amazing I love your videos, learned so much from you. You have the best information from everyone else out there and no cost to beekeepers. All you're videos are top notch, Anyone with a little knowledge of bees can learn a lot from you Thank you keep up the great job. Kamon another beekeeper is also fantastic and you know him too from Tennessee.
Please keep these videos coming, I look forward to all your videos, but this is the grand finale… this is why we do what we do, the reward after all the work!
Love this footage! You’re the only commercial beekeeper I know that shares so much with us. Fascinating! You could put up a webcam and have a live stream of the honey house all day and I would watch it.
I watched the process of selecting frames and pumping out honey with great pleasure. Thanks for sharing. Greetings from St. Petersburg and good luck in business!
I only average about 50 hives and about 3+ ton of honey a year, but I got tired of hand uncapping myself over the years, so I bought one of those Maxant chain uncappers. It made life so much easier, even though it was expensive.
John Mizak I bet it did make things much easier. I look at them in the catalog every year. Lol I have so much to buy and it’s all expensive. One day I’ll have one.
@@SilverGorilla1776 If you hated uncapping as much as I do, you would find the money. I decided to prioritize my spending according to how much labor it would save. ;-)
After seeing the dedication and hard work of people in this honey house, the next time I'll buy the white Canadian honey from this producer I'm going to have a happiness feeling like I got a great bargain, almost for free.
C'est la pause déjeuner qui doit s'avérer délicate ... Perso, je dois batailler pour réussir à ouvrir mon estomac dans ce genre de conditions . Ça doit faire des maturateurs, une salle de stockage, un conditionnement sympathique des fournées pareilles . Bien drôle de pain, bien drôle de baguettes que celle des drôles de dames ... Merci, ... Et courage pour la suite.
Здравствуй, послушай мне думается такое количество прохождения меда по металлическим и пластиковых труб -такое издевательство над ним качества ему точно не добавляет...
@@user-qh6zr2dh9p А ты видел современный доильный аппарат?!А дальше расфасовка в пластиковые пакеты и бутылки...Кончилось время кустарного производства,так что извиняйте.
A very nice setup compared to my very manual process 😄 I am just wondering how you deal with the extracted frames? What method do you use to clean them out, and how do you store them until next season?
Finally making honey in Michigan .. Guess record setting rainfall is good thing. Nectar to the likes ive never seen glad i left the supers on cause they filled them this week. If it quit tomorrow already above average year for me. Dropped pollen sub on just for insurance it will surely quit raining now ... Way to much work lifting all that honey off just to put it back on. Got the sub on top of the brood box.
I'm in Michigan too, southeast corner, most of my honey was made before middle of June, they really haven't done much since then because of all the rain. Missed 90% of the basswood flow because of it, and that hurts, because I can usually count on at least a medium box or more from it over a two week period.
@@jzak5723 better take a look in those supers im in southeast Ortonville up to millington my yards on flow like ive never seen started last week. Just raining nectar
@@hootervillehoneybees8664 What are your bees working on? Down my way, the clover is on its last leg, really nothing else will be blooming in quantity until the fall flowers start. Most of my hives are out in semi-farmland, and there is a lot of soybeans getting close to bloom, but I'm not convinced that bees make much honey from them. I was out pulling honey today, and the hives didn't look any different than they did two weeks ago. I averaged 170 lb. last year, but this year looks to be about half that, unless something changes.
You depend on some many different components to work. How often do you have breakdowns and do you have backups for most of the equipment? That is such a cool setup you have. Would your equipment be able to handle medium supers without to much adjustment? Seems weird not to see much for cappings.
Have you tried 8 frames in a 10 frame super? I have tried 8, 9, and 10 and found that I actually get more honey from 8 frames in a 10 frame super and much less comb scratching to open up the honey cells the blade misses.
He uses nine usually the honey flow is stronger has more cappings with less scraping, so dry this year the honey is dehydrated enough even without cappings, he has a short time line to get the honey out as canola honey likes to crystallize on the comb
Love watching a system in motion, but rather than just filming the machines, maybe you could describe in detail what every machine and person working there are doing. Would be nice to actually hear you describe what you are doing, lots of equipment, but no explanation.
I'd love to see how he cleans those lines out. Every year I struggle to get every bit of honey out of my pump lines thinking to myself "there's gotta be a better way". I always make a huge mess lol
Hopefully there will be no bee parts like legs, wings and heads when this raw honey gets shipped to food co-ops lest some customer considers it "dirty" wants his money back. Quite the operation here. I only got to see part of a Silver bow extraction plant a long time ago. I bet the smell was like heaven.
You have to have a person after the uncapper to scrape the frames? Oh dear. Costly. We have shallows without Hoffman spacers which makes for a tighter cut.
honestly Ian, I really don`t understand this... you harvest canola honey with arround 17% humidity, leave it out there for about 4 weeks.... If we would do this in Europe, we just would have bricks as honeycombs... you as a farmer, do you know if the canola varieties grown in canada have an adapted nectar ,glucose to fructose ratio? Or can it be, that we have winter canola and the bloom is in spring so the night lows can go down below 14°C, would definitely favor crystallization... well I don`t now. questions, questions, questions, never ending questions.... ;-)