How to Harvest Honey From Your Beehive | IFA's Helping to Grow Blog (2024)

How to Harvest Honey From Your Beehive | IFA's Helping to Grow Blog (1)

As a beekeeper, you have a greater connection with local agriculture. It allows you to learn more about the fruits, flowers and vegetables we grow, including which ones produce more nectar for the bee colony. Having bees nearby also helps every garden and tree in the neighborhood with increased pollination.

Of all of the benefits, the greatest personal ­one may still be enjoying fresh, homegrown honey. It’s the one automatically connected with beekeeping, and it comes with immense satisfaction. Honey seems to taste sweeter after all of your year-round work, plus it’s another area where we’re able to live self-sufficiently.

If you’re new to beekeeping–or are interested in starting–you’ll need to know the essentials for how to harvest honey from your beehive. How do you extract honey from the hive, when is the best time of year, and how should you store your fresh honey?

When To Harvest Honey

The greatest honey flow is when the flowers are in full bloom. Early spring will produce a minor honey flow, but the largest honey flow typically begins in June and continues into July.

Only collect honey in a clean comb, one that has not been in a brood chamber or otherwise contaminated by mice, wax moth, etc. You can harvest the first crop as soon as it’s capped so that you have an early varietal, or at least a springtime artisan honey to share or sell. Early honeys are light and mild while later honeys are darker and generally stronger. Be sure to name and label them for organizational ease.

When extracting honey, the honeycomb cells should be 90% capped. The remaining uncapped honey should not be able to run out of the cells for it to be completely ripe for extraction.

How to Harvest Honey From Your Beehive | IFA's Helping to Grow Blog (2)

Honey may be extracted as late as September, although cold honey is more difficult to extract. The ideal temperature is in the range of 75-80 degrees.

As winter approaches, it’s important to leave the colony with at least 80 pounds of honey in the bottom two boxes. These boxes are their food to survive winter, and where they raise their young. This is why we don’t harvest honey from the bottom two boxes.

How to Harvest Honey From Your Beehive | IFA's Helping to Grow Blog (3)

How to Harvest Honey

There are four steps for extracting and storing honey.

1. Pull Frames

Remove the framesfrom the hive. Avoid pulling the frames that have brood on them. Choose only the framesthat have honey in them with the honey capped by beeswax.

2. Remove Wax Caps

There are two basic ways to remove wax caps and extract honey, both of which can be done at home.

Method #1

The crush and strain method involves scraping the honey and wax off the frames, crushing it, and straining the honey out of the wax. This is the least efficient method for the bees and will reduce your honey crop for the following year. The bees use the equivalent of 10 lbs of honey to produce 1 lb of wax.

Method #2

The second and more efficient method involves using a capping scratcher, cold knife, or electric ‘hot’ knife to remove the wax caps from each of the cells on the framesso the honey can drip. When using a cold knife or electric ‘hot’ knife, you will run the tool down the edge of the framesto remove just the outer cap over the honey.

How to Harvest Honey From Your Beehive | IFA's Helping to Grow Blog (4)

3. Extract Honey

Continuing with Method #2, spin the uncapped honey frames in a manual or mechanical centrifuge honey spinner/extractor. (This is a mechanical device used in extracting honey from honeycombs without destroying the comb.) It preserves the wax and allows the bees to refill it the following year instead of rebuilding all the wax.

4. Store Your Honey

Store your honey in any food-safe container. You might consider an IFA food-grade five gallon bucket if you have a large harvest. Pint or quart glass canning jars and smaller food-grade buckets also work well for smaller quantities. We recommend you avoid using metal containers because a chemical reaction may occur.

A Tasty, Healthy & Beneficial Treat

Raw honey that comes straight from the honeycomb and is only strained before bottling will retain most of its beneficial nutrients and natural antioxidants. Aside from adding fresh, healthy honey in your tea, homemade baked goods, or anything else you love, it’s also enjoyed or useful in additional ways.

Serving honey in the comb is becoming more popular, especially among some restaurants and caterers. These businesses provide framesof capped honey for customers to scoop it out fresh. Along with the rich honey, beeswax can be used to make a myriad of items, including chapstick, facial and skin creams, lotions, soaps and candles.


How to Harvest Honey From Your Beehive | IFA's Helping to Grow Blog (5)

Let Us Help

Harvesting your own healthy, delicious honey can and certainly will “bee” a sweet reward for you, your family and friends. If you need beekeeping supplies or helpful advice, drop by your local IFA Country Store. We’re always happy to help.

Information for this article was provided by Matt Bangerter, Assistant Manager, Logan IFA Country Store; and Leonard Hulet, Lawn & Garden, Turf & Ornamental Dept. Manager, St. George IFA Country Store.

How to Harvest Honey From Your Beehive | IFA's Helping to Grow Blog (2024)

FAQs

How to Harvest Honey From Your Beehive | IFA's Helping to Grow Blog? ›

Once every frame is capped on each side you'll know that the honey super is ready to pull. Some beekeepers will even take a frame if it's around 2/3rds of the way capped. The logic here is that the nectar is likely dried to the right moisture content, the bees just haven't capped it yet.

How do farmers know when to harvest the honey? ›

Once every frame is capped on each side you'll know that the honey super is ready to pull. Some beekeepers will even take a frame if it's around 2/3rds of the way capped. The logic here is that the nectar is likely dried to the right moisture content, the bees just haven't capped it yet.

How do you harvest honey easily? ›

The easiest way to harvest honey from a bee hive is through the use of a fume board. A fume board looks much like a regular telescoping top/outer hive cover, but the inside contains an absorbent material that is sprayed with a non-toxic solution that the bees do not enjoy.

What is the best time of day to harvest honey from a beehive? ›

We have found the bees are often calmest in the late afternoon, and at this time the honey in the hive is likely to be warmest and may flow more easily, so this can be a good time to harvest. Also check out our harvesting checklist.

When should you not harvest honey? ›

A good rule of thumb is to not extract unless at least 75% of the cells in the honey combs are capped. By extracting one uncapped honey frame for every three capped frames of honey, the overall moisture content will tend to be below the level where fermentation will occur.

How often should you harvest honey from a beehive? ›

The general rule of thumb is once, maybe twice, per year in the late summer or early fall. If your hive is in hyper drive and filling up frames quickly you are one of those lucky beekeepers than can consider harvesting twice a year and earlier than most beekeepers. It all depends on your hive.

Does honey have to be capped to harvest? ›

The Honest Beekeeper suggests that you should harvest when your hive is full of capped honey, meaning the cell is covered completely in white wax with no honey visible.

How much honey does 1 beehive make? ›

A strong hive can be home to 50–100,000 bees during the peak of the summer. Do a little quick math, and you see how beekeepers arrive at an average of 60lbs. of honey per hive, per year. With the right weather and the right beekeeper, some hives can even produce 100lbs.

How much honey do you extract from a hive? ›

Estimating the pounds of honey in your hive will depend on frame size, with Langstroth deep frames estimated to yield six pounds of honey, medium frames yielding four pounds, and shallow frames estimated to yield three pounds of honey per frame. For better accuracy, you can weigh frames with a portable scale.

What happens if you don't harvest honey from hives? ›

If honey is not harvested from a beehive, the bees continue producing and storing honey. In a few unusual cases, there is enough room to store extra honey without crowding the colony. In most cases storing extra honey will eventually create crowding within the beehive.

How do you harvest honey without being attacked? ›

A campfire must be placed beneath the bee nest or beehive so that the smoke will pacify the bees so they don't attack when you harvest the honey or the beeswax.

What angers honey bees? ›

Nectar death — When bees have a shortage of honey, they enter a fight or flight mindset. This increases their aggression, so much so that they may find other hives to rob for their honey. Perhaps it goes without saying, but bees may also become aggressive if their hives get attacked.

How many times a year do you harvest honey? ›

The general rule of thumb is once, maybe twice, per year in the late summer or early fall. If your hive is in hyper drive and filling up frames quickly you are one of those lucky beekeepers than can consider harvesting twice a year and earlier than most beekeepers. It all depends on your hive.

How much honey can you harvest from one bee hive? ›

There are a lot of variables such as the climate and length of the season, available flower sources and the size and productivity of the bee colony. The range is usually between 50 and 100 pounds per hive but on a really good year 125 or even 150 pounds are possible.

How much honey can you harvest from one hive? ›

A strong hive can be home to 50–100,000 bees during the peak of the summer. Do a little quick math, and you see how beekeepers arrive at an average of 60lbs. of honey per hive, per year. With the right weather and the right beekeeper, some hives can even produce 100lbs.

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