From Garbage to Gold: Making Pure Beeswax

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Published 2022-10-05
Rendering beeswax from honey cappings and burr comb + turning it into a candle.





Fall Line Ridge beekeeping.

All Comments (21)
  • Moment of silence for the bees who thought it was smart to enter the liquid
  • @nigelwylie01
    I am a Bookbinder & Leatherworker. and we use beeswax for conditioning linen & cotton thread before sewing. The wax derived from cappings is regarded as the highest quality. The fact that most of your wax candle came from cappings may partly account for the difference in colour between your candle and the other one at the end. Capping wax is usually brighter and clearer like yours.
  • My grandie and grannie had a rural farm and grandie kept about 2 dozen hives situated at various spots around the farm. Near each hive he would plant different scented flowers, all around the hedgerows, climbing up the barns and storage sheds, the haystack and milking parlor. Grannie used to make scented candles to sell in their farm shop, and some of the flowers were permanent, like the clematis, rhododendron, honeysuckle, gardinia and jasmine. While others were planted as experiments or because that's what grannie said she wanted, so grandie did as he was told - things like phlox, mock orange, iris, sweat pea and lilac. She also used to sell embroidered scent sachets for drawers and wardrobes from the petals of the dried flowers, with the sewn flower on the bag matching the scent. But grannies pride and joy was her rose garden outside her kitchen window, and the wax from the rose hive was only used for their house. She would stand at the sink, watching the bees in the sunshine, flit from one flower to the next, getting duster and more yellow. These bees🐝 made the best beeswax, sweetest smelling candles, and those candles were only ever used in their bedroom. Grannie once said it helped to keep the romance alive and well (with a smile and a wink) - she was 68 at the time and I blushed I was so embarrassed ! She stood there laughing at how red faced I got, telling grandie when he came back for tea, and he bust a gut laughing as well. They were married for 76 years and got married when grandie was 18, and grannie 16. They were each others first, last, and only love and died within 2 days of each other. They were buried together, next to each other, side by side. Sorry about the ramble, but watching this video, seeing you making the beeswax brought back so many happy memories, especially Sundays - church and then all the 3 sons and 2 daughters families (12 adults & 17 children) went there for a Sunday roast lunch, and then sandwiches, salad, and grannies home made cakes and pies for tea about 6 hours later. Her cooking was amazing, and her home always smelled of fresh bread, cakes baking, tea, roast meat, scented flowers, and old waxed furniture. Thanks for making those wonderful forgotten memories come alive again.
  • @Rig0r_M0rtis
    A fun fact: the original wax that bees produce from their glands is clear and looks like ice flakes. But as they use it with their mouths it gets mixed with whatever else they're chewing on like pollen, honey or plant sap. So basically the fresher the wax is the less colour and smell it has.
  • In the future, when you are letting the beeswax/slop mix cool, use (if you have it) a slightly deeper container and fasten a piece of clean window screen across the top, thereby keeping wayward bees from doing a kamikaze dive into the cooling wax.
  • This definitely explains why beeswax candles are so expensive. Thanks for the lesson!
  • @natandessie
    This is the best video I have seen for removing wax. I never did it correctly. Now I feel like I will be able to :)
  • @axelord4ever
    Small tip for parchment paper so it doesn't try to fly off on its own and fit molds better. Crinkle it all up and smash it into a ball. Get as much fine webfold lines in it, and you'll be able to shape it very easily to fit molds and other shapes. This has come in use for me for cooking and other kitchen stuff but I can't see why it would apply in helping you in make some nice, square beeswax cakes.
  • @johnking8679
    As an ex-beekeeper, I agree that beekeeping is a great hobby. We never made that much honey - about 12 gallons/year, which we usually just gave away to our fellow church members !!
  • @pwbpeter
    I was given perhaps 30 Lbs of dirty wax from a friends late fathers hives I cleaned it up like you did ,what i found was to use silicon cooking molds to pour it into ,it pops out of them nicely . then you can remelt them for what ever you need. great video !
  • regarding your wife's baking pans - when you said "there's quite a bit at stake right now" I literally busted out laughing - your sense of humor is divine and this is hands down one of the coolest videos I've seen in a long time!
  • @valerierh07
    Couple of ideas, maple syrup finishing filters are washable and reusable. Even after filtering maple syrup that is 219 degrees. Might be helpful, especially with the strong loops attached that you can thread a stick or more through to hold it up. Maybe put some screen over the wax while it cools to keep the bee 🐝 off. Either way if I were doing what you are I’d invest $19 in 12 maple syrup finishing filters. Totally worth it!! 👍🏼
  • @BliffleSplick
    As someone who used to reclaim wax as a hobby, I think you're putting a few extra and unneeded steps into this - the cocoons and whatnot will usually float in the water level and not embed itself into the wax very much. Basically you need to get the water up to the point where the wax liquefies. After it's become a soup from hell just kill the heat and cover it. There's enough thermal mass in the water to keep it warm for a while and the time will help it settle into layers - wax at the top, cocoons, other filth that floats in water, and hell broth. Once it's cold, you can take the puck of wax out and scrape the filth from the bottom. Boiling is a bit of overkill, and boiling it for 10 minutes past it all being melted will only have the benefit of killing off any pathogens (which isn't usually a concern if you're making wax for candles).
  • @jtreview7506
    Literally never done anything with beekeeping or wax making or watched any videos about either of them, don’t know how I’ve ended up here but it was very enjoyable
  • Does anyone else find this gentleman's voice extremely comforting..!? 😄 Thanks for the vid!
  • @tcfmarch17
    Next time I'm at a farmers market I will most definitely buy beeswax candles. This was an amazing adventure you took me on. Thanks for all you do for your beautiful bees. I've never had such an appreciation for beekeepers and their hives...
  • @mattb6329
    I have to be honest say, that was probably one of of the most unexpectedly interesting videos I have seen in quite a while. Definite wow moment at the end, I take my hat off to you in what you are producing, and in fact recycling, from naturally occurring goodness.
  • The wax you made looks like liquid gold it was very nice. Thanks for sharing your videos with us and God bless
  • The most beautiful part of this video for me was seeing that glorious amber gold pour from the bucket into those cake pans. Beeswax is such an amazing substance. So versatile in it's applications.
  • @stke1982
    my process is a bit simpler: 1. use more water on first round, just heat remove some of the floating junk with a small strainer and let cool. (no messy pour into through filter) all the heavy stuff will settle and you have a pretty clean cake without mess 2. melt just the wax again and pour through stocking or fine filter 3. mix with water again (this will filter out any additional minor water soluble or heavier than water contaminants), heat and then let cool again. => you will end up with a very clean floating cake with less effort, 1 pour instead of 3, less containers/materials needed (just 2 pots)