We are just a few weeks away from pulling spring honey from our six bee boxes. Two of the six are relatively new hives made from successful splits from the existing colonies, so they won't make a tremendous amount of honey. We're getting all our ducks in a row, preparing for that day that we extract the honey from the frames.
Have I ever told you that beekeeping is an expensive hobby? It is! Even though I've made a lot of the bottom boards and telescoping tops, the other equipment you must buy is quite an investment. Tricia and I live frugally and like to have this hobby support itself financially, so we've waited until we're 'in the black' before additional investments.
One pricey thing you need is the extractor. When you cut the wax cap off of your frames of honey, you put the frames in an extractor and spin the frames. Centrifugal force throws the honey out of the frames and onto the walls of the pot. The honey drips down and as it fills, you open the honey gate to allow the honey to fill 5 gallon buckets. From there, you bottle the honey up in pint jars for sale.
Up to this point we've been borrowing an extractor. Well, a nice guy in our bee club is upgrading to a bigger extractor. He told us to use his old extractor for as long as we want to use it! We brought him a check to buy it, but he would not accept it. What a guy! Here is the machine:
Here's a problem you run into with beekeeping. Are you keeping bees or are they keeping you? Good question, because as you get all the boxes and frames, suits and smokers, hive tools, uncapping tanks, filters and jars, you quickly run out of space in which to store all the bee paraphenalia.
So we are looking forward to (perhaps next year once we sell all the 2026 honey) buying a honey house. We've extracted honey in our garage and had no problem, but it would be nice to have a little storage building to serve as our honey house where we'll store all of the bee equipment as well as extract and bottle the honey we collect.
Here is one of two styles we're looking at. I like this one. Double doors, windows, solid flooring.
Here's the one I think I like a little better. Same basic concept, but with a gambrel roof.
A gambrel roof adds the benefit of having more storage area up on a loft. There's storage up on one side:
And more storage up in the loft on the opposite side.
This would be ideal for us. Now we're just shopping and probably won't make a purchase until next year some time. These sheds are well built and they are expensive!
When I was a young boy, mom would take us shopping for clothes at a department store in Lake Charles called "The White House." From time to time Dad would accompany us on these dreaded trips. Mom would pick out a new outfit for us to wear to church on Easter Sunday and Dad would exclaim, "Good gravy, Kay! Do you know how many barrels of rice I have to sell to buy that shirt?!" As we age, we turn in to our parents, I'm finding.
As I look at the price tag on this shed, I think, "Do you know how many pint jars of honey we'd have to sell to pay for this shed?!" The answer is almost 412 jars.