Cleaning Melting and Filtering Beeswax

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  • čas přidán 29. 04. 2013
  • It's a beekeeping update. Sort of. I wanted to show ya'll how I deal with all that left over wax from my crush and strain honey extraction. It's pretty simple. Wash the wax with cold water. Then melt it in a pot with 2" of water in the bottom. Let cool over night, dump out water. Then scrape the bottom of the wax hunk with a knife. Once all the loose goo comes off, go through the process again. I took 4-5 meltings to be satisfied with the results. It's pretty easy all things considered. Just time consuming.
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Komentáře • 244

  • @bchains
    @bchains Před 8 lety +1

    Super helpful tutorial. I've been struggling with this process for years and haven't yet made clean wax. Thanks!!

  • @consuelobernardita
    @consuelobernardita Před 7 lety +6

    Thank you for this very helpful video. I'm planning on buying raw wax from a farm and I think they did a little bit of the process but still needs some more filtering.
    Please do not change the way you are, or you look at the camera. You are a wonderful woman!

  • @theresadaley154
    @theresadaley154 Před 7 lety +10

    Thank you so much for video. You did a great job! Your practical advice about what pot to use and not to get any wax down the drain is super helpful. :)

  • @Andysfishing
    @Andysfishing Před 9 lety +4

    Great simple video.
    I just started with bees, caught/rescued my own swarm.
    Looking forward to more learning from you.
    I'm in Australia.

  • @elenacerasela
    @elenacerasela Před 8 lety +2

    I have bees. I use the honey water to make kombucha, it's really good for it. I also added to vinegar making, for the mother of vinegar to consume.

  • @ericbarnes8092
    @ericbarnes8092 Před 10 lety +1

    Thanks! I am trying all this for the first time! It is nice to have someone help me through the process. I do not want to waste the precious wax that my bees worked so hard to make...so I do not want to mess this up.

  • @rdownmakeITbetter
    @rdownmakeITbetter Před 10 lety +1

    Thank you! I've finally been able to clean up a pile of old wax I had using this technique. Works a treat.

  • @lisafreebairn7736
    @lisafreebairn7736 Před 6 lety +2

    Your process was way more simple than other videos I watched. Thanks. You didn't use all sorts of sieves and cheesecloths. This is a lot less messy. Yeah, you have to do several times in the pot. But it really works.

  • @RichardGordonBruce
    @RichardGordonBruce Před 5 lety +1

    Great video! When our TBH failed I also had an unexpected honey, propolis, pollen and wax harvest. Thanks for making this video.

  • @laurendoninger2693
    @laurendoninger2693 Před 7 lety +3

    Thank you very much for this helpful video. I'm a new beekeeper and won't be harvesting anything until the spring. Hopefully, I'll be able to keep the bees alive over winter. I have been scraping burr comb when I do hive checks and really don't have enough to bother rendering, but I'm might give it a go anyway. Thanks again.

  • @ronaldjesse9892
    @ronaldjesse9892 Před 10 lety +2

    Hi, i use some vinagre when the wax is hot, that helps to filter the bits a lot faster. Just 1 or 2 heatings will do the job. If you melt the clean caps seperate from the the dirty ones you can get a very clean waxblock in just one melting

  • @MahmoudSuhail
    @MahmoudSuhail Před 8 lety +9

    By the way, if you keep it "warm" and "still" (making sure not heating up to bubbling) for several hours then let it cool down to room temperature slowly, you don't need to repeat the process few times as you give enough time for sedimentation of foreign particles.

  • @BubblyMoonNaturalsLLC
    @BubblyMoonNaturalsLLC Před 7 lety +4

    This is an amazingly straight forward video. Thanks for taking the time to share!

  • @joanieonie4135
    @joanieonie4135 Před 3 lety

    Just found ur video in a Google search...8 years after u posted. Thanks so much! Subscribed

  • @th3jazzy
    @th3jazzy Před 2 lety

    this is the simplest way I've seen on how to do this process. thank you!!!!

  • @Voxpopuli_sucka
    @Voxpopuli_sucka Před 6 měsíci

    Straightforward, clear and concise. Excellent video

  • @raintogreen
    @raintogreen  Před 11 lety +6

    I never thought of that! Good use of the sugars in the honey and water for soaking grains/seeds. Awesome idea!!

  • @Eclipse1Worlds
    @Eclipse1Worlds Před 10 lety +1

    Thank you for this, I am a beginner this year, and this greatly helps me to understand the process.

  • @raintogreen
    @raintogreen  Před 10 lety +2

    I soak my wax to help dissolve the honey. I use warm (not hot) water and just let it sit over night or for a few days to get all the leftover honey off of the wax. It's kind of over kill since the hot water when you melt the honey will do the same thing. But the cleaner the wax is when I start the melting/filtering process the fewer times I have to melt and cool. I usually double up strainers to make a tighter mesh to catch most of the tiny particles of wax once it's done washing.

  • @longshorejlepper2582
    @longshorejlepper2582 Před 7 lety +2

    Good job on the video , both the presentation and the camera work !

  • @tmjoutdoors9486
    @tmjoutdoors9486 Před 5 lety

    Very nice video. Your a great speaker, very informative. Thank you from IL.

  • @mostrico
    @mostrico Před rokem

    You have so far the best way I have seen, thank you so much

  • @raintogreen
    @raintogreen  Před 10 lety +1

    That is a really great question and I have no idea! I never measured all the gunk before to see how much it weighed. I ended up with about a 5 lb. block of wax but I've no idea what I started with. I would filter it to about what I did for lotion bars. It should be clean and free of impurities if you'll be making cosmetics. It's less important to be super filtered if you are using the wax for candles.

  • @RhetteLawe
    @RhetteLawe Před 9 lety +9

    Actually this is a good bit of info and it's fairly to the point, which is always nice.

  • @TJW531
    @TJW531 Před 7 lety +1

    thank you! trying your method now. appreciate the time you took to make the video.

  • @claudioosorio4847
    @claudioosorio4847 Před 5 lety

    Good job. The best I've seen after watching many others.

  • @lauragueorguieva
    @lauragueorguieva Před 6 lety

    Thanks a lot!!! I have a big chunk of unfiltered beewax and really wanted to use it for cosmetics! I'm gonna try it tommorrow

  • @TedIsensee
    @TedIsensee Před 4 lety +1

    I added a new step to the filtering process. When the wax in liquified in the pot with the water, I take a handheld strainer and dip it into the mixture to remove the non wax particles. Then I dump what I collect in the strainer over cheesecloth stretched over a pot with a couple inches of water in it. That gives me a bit of clean wax which I will add to the next pot I heat up. This greatly reduces the impurities that are in the big pot of wax. So I will have much less "gunk" to scrape off the bottom of the cooled cake of wax. Having multiple pots for this purpose is needed. Two are enough but four would be better so you can process more wax.

  • @candacecrutcher6566
    @candacecrutcher6566 Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much! I will be trying this way for my first time. We just had our first harvest so we’ll have a bit to melt down. I’d like to save some for salves and things. :)

  • @DonPacimo
    @DonPacimo Před 10 lety +2

    Using any metal container that can be closed tightly, such as a brand new one gallon paint can, place the wax in the can in as small pieces as patience will allow, add the turpentine, close the lid tight, and without stirring or turning, in a few days the mixture will have turn into a paste or a sauce, depending on the proportion. For waxing floors, I like a hard paste, for delicate veneers on antique furniture, the texture of tooth paste works best.

  • @beboguerra
    @beboguerra Před 8 lety +31

    i really dont know why im watching a video of something i will never do myself at 5 am. it was a good video though.

    • @shadygaming6523
      @shadygaming6523 Před 5 lety +2

      hi stranger, have a good day

    • @denispol79
      @denispol79 Před 5 lety +2

      You're still in better position then mine!
      I'm an astronomer and we're having a midnight rain here.
      So i'm watching bee handling videos now :)

  • @DrViktorFursov
    @DrViktorFursov Před 7 lety +1

    Thank you for interesting Video. Best greetings from beekeepers in Ukraine! Good luck and good honey!

  • @heureuse8568
    @heureuse8568 Před rokem

    Thank you! I bought some beeswax for candle making, but the wicks are getting clogged with some kind of microscopic debris (that isn't visible to the eye in the meltet wax). Could it be pollen and propolis? Or even too much honey left in the wax?...

  • @romanaanaborc9116
    @romanaanaborc9116 Před 7 lety +1

    Hi. I have a question. How long do you boil it until you let it cool down? Thanks.

  • @akumatsumi5593
    @akumatsumi5593 Před 5 lety

    Hi! Can I do the same even though I also have larvae and almost-completely-developed drones? They should also sink to the bottom right? C:

  • @Torro43
    @Torro43 Před 8 lety +1

    I this is an older post but I will ask. Couldn't I just wrap the comb in cheese cloth (fine cheese cloth) and boil it that way to get the wax separated from the debris?

  • @Bakhtaryan
    @Bakhtaryan Před 7 lety +1

    I bought some beeswax online, but it's a green type of colour. Is this normal? I want to use it in making my own beard balm.

  • @raintogreen
    @raintogreen  Před 10 lety +1

    Virgin wax is filled with honey and bee parts. I've never heard of anyone using virgin wax before it's been melted and filtered, it might make your furniture wax sticky. I'm sure it would save you some time since shaving down wax can be tedious. I don't sell my wax because I harvest just enough for my own uses. I'm not sure beeswax can be purchased pre-cleaning in it's virgin state.

  • @Gratz1333
    @Gratz1333 Před 9 lety

    if i have it all full of honey still can i just melt it all and let cool? the honey will be on the bottom and wax on top?

  • @another7random
    @another7random Před rokem

    Hey what do you use to squeeze the honey out of the comb?

  • @brettjames4295
    @brettjames4295 Před 5 lety

    I tried this method and all of my slum gum stuck to the underneath of the wax. Nothing sunk to the bottom, so when I pull the cake out I had all of the slum gum stuck right there and had to scrape it off. A lot of it was also incorporated into the beeswax, so unfortunately this method didn’t really work for me that well. Do you have any pointers? Thanks!

  • @abdulmuizchulan214
    @abdulmuizchulan214 Před 2 lety

    Do i have to add up water or keep adding up water in each boiling session?

  • @annierossdancer
    @annierossdancer Před 8 lety +1

    Thanks for your ideas. Especially washing the dirty wax before heating, I've never washed it. What is your method for draining the "dirty' water between each of your overnight soaks? Thank you!

  • @Roonie41
    @Roonie41 Před 7 lety +1

    Do you have a video that talks about the uses for beeswax? I have so much and I want to use it instead of letting it go to waste.

  • @PiranhaFisher
    @PiranhaFisher Před 10 lety

    Does the final was block contain any water at all?
    I want to follow your method but I want it to be %100 beeswax
    Thanks

  • @DonPacimo
    @DonPacimo Před 10 lety

    Hello Jen,
    The reason for this note is thusly; I prepare my own furniture wax using a primitive and simple English recipe, so simple in fact, that it cannot be found on the market. All it takes is the bee´s wax and the purest turpentine that can be found, and that’s all.

  • @ugiemoore1
    @ugiemoore1 Před 10 lety

    i got a question my step dad has bees he brought me 3 big ziplock bags and says here is u some beeswax for ur soap making, well its kind of mushy and soft he said he cooked it. So how do i now get it to be a hard beeswax i can't figure what he did.

  • @austinmiller1427
    @austinmiller1427 Před 2 lety

    You are so awesome. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.

  • @mavisclerke1416
    @mavisclerke1416 Před 5 lety

    I shall try your process, it is simple and understandable

  • @googleconspiricyiphones
    @googleconspiricyiphones Před 10 lety

    What is the gunk at the bottom? Pollen? Bee body parts? Where does the dirt come from?

  • @McDuffin
    @McDuffin Před 7 lety

    Let it come to a boil and remove from heat? Or just melt it and remove? Thanks.

  • @bettybogda4819
    @bettybogda4819 Před 10 lety

    I liked this video a lot. Very nicely done. When I did mine, mine stuck to the sides of the pan and cracked in the middle. Do you think this is because my pan was too big for the amount of wax I had? The wax was only about 1/2 inch thick.

  • @ericbarnes8092
    @ericbarnes8092 Před 10 lety

    So I take it this is an alternative method to directly heating up the cappings and using cheesecloth to strain anything out? By sitting twice over night it naturally strains itself...is that correct?

  • @AS-ug2vq
    @AS-ug2vq Před 3 lety

    What is the weight of one brick that's in your hand?

  • @arabianhilwa
    @arabianhilwa Před 7 lety

    Thanks for this great information! Sounds simple enough!! :)

  • @kiralystefan2823
    @kiralystefan2823 Před 5 lety

    Hello it is posible separate parafin to bee wax? Thanks!

  • @JenniferCooperbowlfull

    Can you tell me, is the wax you were cleaning and filtering from the cap on the frames or???

  • @laven111
    @laven111 Před 2 lety

    This a great video . I had not idea you need todo this

  • @miroslavtordaji1675
    @miroslavtordaji1675 Před 7 lety

    thanks for the video,I found it very useful .....just one question: you don't run liquid wax thru sieve?

  • @CarlosDanger86
    @CarlosDanger86 Před 10 lety

    Hi, can you tell me if that wax still gets some honey scent to it after that double melting? :)

  • @il_egiziano
    @il_egiziano Před 10 lety

    nice video, but if i want it extra white for cosmetic manufacturing how many times i need to wash it ?

  • @alrightsayyeah
    @alrightsayyeah Před 10 lety

    I'm actually really nervous about doing this for the first time, I've seen videos on make shift solar ovens to melt and filter the wax but I'm unsure I want an easy process

  • @charlieponton123
    @charlieponton123 Před 7 lety +2

    awesome video, thank you for the knowledge

  • @Lanninglongarmmowing
    @Lanninglongarmmowing Před 10 lety +14

    You must have a few hundred dollars of bees wax there. Lol. Wow.

  • @Arcturian1111
    @Arcturian1111 Před rokem

    A great education in beeswax, thank you . Now I'm going to make real THC Cream/Balm w beeswax and coconut oil.

  • @123teets
    @123teets Před 10 lety

    Hello Rain nice video myself I wash capping wax in warm water .The warm water thins out any honey still on the wax .using a 5 gallon bucket containing capings and warm water to cover capings .Iuse my hands working the wax and water a few minutes Ihave another bucket with some sheer curtain material across top of bucket but hanging down in bucket a few inches to hold wax that is getting washed then dump wax water mix while still warm and a little more warm water over wax and let sit so water drains or you can pull the curtain material up around wax and off bucket and wring water out Thanks Jim

  • @hollyhardwick7966
    @hollyhardwick7966 Před 5 lety

    you never pour it through a tshirt or a piece of cloth? I have to filter 20-30lbs at a time and I find it too much work. I heat it with water just like you do when Its all melted I pour it into a bucket through a an old tshirt. then repeat 3-4 times.

  • @ebymathews9071
    @ebymathews9071 Před 3 lety

    What do you do with beeswax

  • @michaelmcneil4168
    @michaelmcneil4168 Před 7 lety

    Hi.
    Try placing a 60 watt tungsten filament lamp in the bucket and the wax should float off the rubbish overnight. Switch the bulb offa nd lif the wax away when solid. Wouldn't it separate like that?

  • @savardfamily4279
    @savardfamily4279 Před 6 lety +1

    Ty. You made it look easy.

  • @laurabrown4770
    @laurabrown4770 Před 6 lety

    how long do you boil?

  • @iwrist313
    @iwrist313 Před 5 lety +2

    You wasted all that residual honey. Instead of rinsing the wax you could have just added water and boil the wax on low and let cool. After the wax solidified, you could strain that water and reuse it to feed the bees, a portion for cooking and use in drinks .

  • @Robbob9933
    @Robbob9933 Před 10 lety

    Ever try a double boiler with no water in the wax?

  • @abdulrahmanal-marri5459
    @abdulrahmanal-marri5459 Před 10 lety

    Thank you So much , I like what you do .

  • @davidstanden5552
    @davidstanden5552 Před 9 lety

    Great video. Thanks for sharing!

  • @highlineprecision2052
    @highlineprecision2052 Před 3 lety

    Thank you really showed the ease of the process thanks a lot more sense now

  • @HolySpiritManifestoriginal
    @HolySpiritManifestoriginal Před 2 měsíci

    How do y😊u melt thick lumps

  • @TechMan-sl5gf
    @TechMan-sl5gf Před 9 lety +2

    Well, you could heat up the bees wax then pour it slowly through a paper towel in a strainer. This will filter it allot better. I saw someone using this filtering method with a solar wax melter and the wax was nearly clean on the first pass. But I would do what you showed for the second pass. I think a mix of the two would produce a nice product as far as home based.

    • @josephvogel7234
      @josephvogel7234 Před 4 lety

      I think your right. have you tried it? Did it work?

  • @mya514
    @mya514 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video...do you sell your wax?

  • @VicariousReality7
    @VicariousReality7 Před 9 lety

    You do not filter it with a cloth?

  • @mwendaikiara
    @mwendaikiara Před 6 lety

    This was helpful. Thanks for sharing!

  • @Penfold8
    @Penfold8 Před 11 lety

    Do you collect the Propolous?

  • @VirginiaWolf88
    @VirginiaWolf88 Před 10 lety

    Very Nice Video!! Thank You for Sharing that!!!

  • @fredshananaquet6378
    @fredshananaquet6378 Před 10 lety

    How many hives do you have

  • @rosstituteuk
    @rosstituteuk Před 5 lety

    Amazing. You're great. Thankyou.

  • @joseamorales634
    @joseamorales634 Před 8 lety

    Hi I have a question do you sell beeswax?

  • @ericswope1096
    @ericswope1096 Před 6 lety

    This is a helpful video. Thanks!

  • @ridgelyjones433
    @ridgelyjones433 Před 9 lety

    How much would that cost

  • @AndrewRMillar
    @AndrewRMillar Před 10 lety

    You can get it clear sooner by telling the wax cool slower by putting the pan in a Haybox, a box used in the olden days for cooking, this lets more particulate matter sink to the bottom.

  • @garyfawcett996
    @garyfawcett996 Před 10 lety +6

    Great video, we do a similar process except with the first melt we filter it through a cheese cloth. This gets rid of most of bee bits and lumps of propolis.
    We must do a blog post one day about the whole process.

    • @HoneyBeesUK
      @HoneyBeesUK Před 10 lety +1

      Have also used this easy method. As Gary said putting it through a cloth works even quicker. Old tights or stockings are really good for this and can be used several times.

    • @garyfawcett996
      @garyfawcett996 Před 10 lety

      Yep and the old clothes make great fire lighters for the smoker :)

    • @johnsuma3371
      @johnsuma3371 Před 9 lety

      uhh I am a ignorant beginner no native english... What is a cheese cloth ?

    • @bernardcreache6597
      @bernardcreache6597 Před 9 lety

      It's essentially a filter. Like a mesh of cloth that will filter out the impurities.

    • @shadygaming6523
      @shadygaming6523 Před 5 lety

      do you add cheese to it before or after the melting?

  • @raintogreen
    @raintogreen  Před 10 lety +1

    The only problem with that method is the beeswax must be kept hot. As it cools down it solidifies and without the wax in a liquid form nothing will get through the cheesecloth. Plus I found that the cheesecloth collects a lot of wax that will never be usable. But it is true you can do the cheesecloth method, I just find it a bit more messy.

  • @raintogreen
    @raintogreen  Před 10 lety

    I haven't tried that yet. But I would like to, because propolis is good stuff.

  • @AndrewMacaambac
    @AndrewMacaambac Před 4 lety

    Use low heat to maintain the soft texture of the beeswax. Too much heat makes it fragile. Usually I dont allow it to boil I only heat it up enough to melt the wax.

  • @raintogreen
    @raintogreen  Před 10 lety +1

    To get it really white you'll have to start out with virgin wax or wax that was created that year. It's best from honey supers because it's never had any brood in it. This wax is already really light colored. As for how many times you'd have to wash it..... I've got no clue. Mine lightened up considerably with every washing and I went through at least 5. But if you are using virgin wax, you won't have to wash it as much because it's brand new wax.

  • @edwardkosciuk4341
    @edwardkosciuk4341 Před 2 lety

    Great job! Thank you.

  • @clons3253
    @clons3253 Před 7 lety +2

    I just watched LDS prepper he has a much faster way of filtering you should take a look at it. He has a cookie sheet filled with a little water and a screen with a piece of paper towel in a solar heater and takes a small pile of wax, lets it melt and continues this until he has all the wax melted the paper towel holds all of the impurities and he lets it cool over night and it's perfectly filtered and formed in the cake pan with water.

    • @wufongtanwufong5579
      @wufongtanwufong5579 Před 5 lety

      Every prepper video = 20 minutes of listening to someone telling you that "If you don't do it this way you will DIE!!!!!!!! Followed up by 2 minutes of them actually showing you what to do.

  • @olatrgr
    @olatrgr Před 7 lety +1

    Thank you, very nice tutorial!!! :D

  • @KatyShores33
    @KatyShores33 Před 7 lety

    Very informative video. Thanks

  • @tomhendry1
    @tomhendry1 Před 6 lety

    Thank you. Very informative!

  • @dave4854
    @dave4854 Před 10 lety +7

    I spread all my wax out on a large 10X10' piece of plastic and let the bees clean it, then melt it, strain it thru 4 layers of cheese cloth and pour it in molds.

    • @raintogreen
      @raintogreen  Před 10 lety +6

      I've never done that because it can insight 'robbing' mentality in the nearby hives. I never let the bees clean anything because I don't want to try and stop a mob of bees.

    • @chrishodder7098
      @chrishodder7098 Před 8 lety +3

      +dave12546 not recommended as a) attracts robber bees and wasps and b) can cause disease pass from hibe to hibe

    • @dave4854
      @dave4854 Před 8 lety +1

      maybe if you have the plastic next to the hives, my hives are a 100 yds away and never had a problem