Do you have an object laying around the house that you would like to make a bajillion clones out of in the form of candles? Let me show you how to make a silicone mold. Follow these steps.
1. Is your object the right shape? You can't make a mold with anything with a hole in it, like the crooked arm in this object. The reason is that you can't pull the candle out of the mold with out tearing apart the mold. Also, your object needs to have some sort of flat bottom so you don't have a rocking candle, lighting everything around it on fire!
2. Is your object porous? I chose a sugar cake to mold. The problem is that once the liquid silicone meets the sugar cake, the cake will dissolve. Spray wood or other porous surfaces with an enamel to keep the silicone from permanently sticking. I sprayed 5 layers of enamel on this sugar cake, waiting for the enamel to dry between applications.
3. Pick a container to make the mold. I'm using an old yogurt container. It gives about half an inch around the sugar cake.
4. Glue your item to the bottom of your container.
5. Mix and measure the silicone according to the manufacturers directions. For this mold, I used AeroMarine 125 Silicone RTV Rubber, 25 Durometer Moldmaking Compound, parts A and B. The Mix ration is 1:1. Rather than eyeballing 1:1, I weighed Part A and Part B to make sure they were equal as I was pouting them into the container. Mix the mixture quickly so that you have time to pour it before the mold cures.
6. Pour in the silicone on top of your item.
7. Tap out the bubbles in the mold by banging the mold against a surface or putting something that vibrates like a palm sander against the bottom of the mold to dislodge bubbles.
8. After the mold cures, cut it out of the container. Drill a hole for the wick at the top of the mold
9. Cut a slit on the side of the mold to easily pull out the candle
10. Add a wick, put a rubber band around the circumference to hold in the wax, pour in hot beeswax and you have a candle.
Topbar Beekeeping
I'm an urban topbar beekeeper in Albuquerque, NM. I manage hives in backyards and small organic farms within city limits. These hives are probably pollinating your veggie patches right now. Visit my website at: http://brownsdowntownbees.com/
10/15/13
9/9/13
PNM Rocks! Cinderblock trap out
I've been working with PNM's Environmental Scientist, Steven S. to help trap out some bees from a PNM substation cinderblock wall within Albuquerque. Three cheers for PNM going out and finding a local beekeeper to remove live honeybees, rather than using an exterminator. This is especially admiral for a trap out, which involves many visits to the site over a 6 week period of time and someone from the company always has to be present for safety concerns.
This trap out was slick. No problems in setting it up. I placed a frame of young honeybee larvae with all the nurse bees into the top bar hive. This will be the new home for the bees that exit the original hive and have no better place to live. They will make a queen with the new larvae and create a brand new colony. It's a late season trap out and I'll be transferring bees week by week into my stronger hives so that they can survive the winter.
The only odd part about this trap out is that it is in a PNM substation. When entering the substation, we have to wear protective fire wear and are limited on entering the premises if it is raining. There is always a dull hum of machinery. Wondering if the dull hum is enticing to bee colonies?
This trap out was slick. No problems in setting it up. I placed a frame of young honeybee larvae with all the nurse bees into the top bar hive. This will be the new home for the bees that exit the original hive and have no better place to live. They will make a queen with the new larvae and create a brand new colony. It's a late season trap out and I'll be transferring bees week by week into my stronger hives so that they can survive the winter.
The only odd part about this trap out is that it is in a PNM substation. When entering the substation, we have to wear protective fire wear and are limited on entering the premises if it is raining. There is always a dull hum of machinery. Wondering if the dull hum is enticing to bee colonies?
The Top Bar Trap balanced on a ladder |
A detail of the trap. The cone has a frayed exit hole and is glued to the wall using silicone |
Can you hear the hum? |
5/5/13
University Swarm, aka Twin Peaks
Just caught this rocking swarm by UNM, off of Lead and University, in Albuquerque. I dub this 2 foot by 6 inch long swarm, and sister swarm 1 foot by 6 inches, Twin Peaks. I must have done something good in my past to deserve 2013's easy swarm Karma.
Twin Peaks |
Lead and University |
Cut the branches and lowered the swarms into my box with a tupperwear filled with a paper towel soaked in sugar water |
Ready for the drive home, I'll go back this afternoon to pick up the foragers |
Added a dollap of beeswax dripping with honey to give them a good start and make the hive smell like "home" |
Oh Canada! |
4/30/13
Hiving Packages in Top Bars
4 gorgeous, healthy packages purchased from the remarkable Megan Mahoney, Mahoney Apiaries, driven 30 hours from CA.
Packages cleaned and prepped enthusiastically by Phill Remick.
Vida Verde Organic farm in the heart of Los Ranchos, Albuquerque
4 Top Bar Hives prepped for packages with 6, 1 year old drawn combs of beeswax in each hive, a mixture of 1:4 sugar water in 2 quart sized mason jars flipped upside down with holes poked into the tops.
What a forgot, my darned VEIL. No worries, wrapped a piece of screen door around my head and proceeded to install packages in a swirl of bees.
Packages cleaned and prepped enthusiastically by Phill Remick.
Vida Verde Organic farm in the heart of Los Ranchos, Albuquerque
4 Top Bar Hives prepped for packages with 6, 1 year old drawn combs of beeswax in each hive, a mixture of 1:4 sugar water in 2 quart sized mason jars flipped upside down with holes poked into the tops.
What a forgot, my darned VEIL. No worries, wrapped a piece of screen door around my head and proceeded to install packages in a swirl of bees.
Pressed the queen cages into the 3rd comb from the entrance. I like to have the 3rd comb as my "business" bar. Any fancy business (installing queens, adding queen cells, etc) that happens in my hives, happens on the 3rd bar.
Lay the package in the back of the hive so the bees can come out and find the queen.
Hives are all installed. I even had a bonus swarm move into one of my empty top bar hives in the last week so I ended up with an extra hive. Yahoo!
4/27/13
Top Bar Hives- Economically Sustainable Beekeeping in Jamaica
Jessie Inspecting a Langstroth Hive |
In a nutshell, I taught 152 beekeepers on Top Bar Hives and Sustainable Beekeeping from one end of Jamaica to the other, in Kingston, Westmoreland, Barton's, St. Thomas, St. Mary and Portland.
Jamaica has banned the importation of beeswax to the country so they can't make enough beeswax to support the foundation needed for Langstroth hives. Each apiary is suggested to have 10% Top Bar hives, solely for wax production, but nobody knows how to use this style of hive yet! I was there continuing the education of previous trainers, NM's own Les Crowder and Megan Mahoney! Tom Hebert from Honduras has also participated in the program.
Jessie's Top 9 Teaching List
1. Top Bar Beekeeping is Awesome- By the time I had given my 45 minute demo about how awesome Top Bar Beekeeping is, people were pulling out their measuring tapes to find out dimensions and make their own hives. The benefits of these hives are huge to this country:
- Cheap, hives can even be made out of woven bamboo, burlap coffee bags or bundled straw to cut costs even further
- More beeswax production to make Langstroth foundation or start producing beeswax products.
- No hidden places for Hive Beetles to make a home
- No equipment storage
- No extra parts, no extractors, or frames, or foundation or boxes, or queen excluders
- Lightweight, anybody can lift a 10 pound comb
Woven Top Bar Hive |
2. Queen Rearing- The idea of rearing queens that are resistant to disease and pathogens is rocking their world! Every queen rearing talk would lead to people telling me about their new treatment for mites. I just kept telling them, "Why put a bandaid on the problem, when you can make it so they don't get sick to begin with, through genetics."
Grafting Queens, Portland Bee Farmer's Assoc. |
Portland Bee Farmer's Assoc, Queen Yard |
3. Happy Birthday! There were 8 queen bees born on my birthday, April 14th at the Yerba Buena Model Top Bar Apiary. We just kept caging virgin queen after queen. Shameless plug: if you are reading this and want to be a top bar beekeeping intern at an unbelievable farm, check out my gracious hosts at Yerba Buena Farm.
Catch that virgin queen! |
My host, Agape Adams with a queen |
4. Instructions on how to transfer a Langstroth to Top Bar Hive
- You can do this by making comb savers and cutting 4 fully capped brood frames from a strong and healthy Langstroth hive during a nectar flow. Put the frames and any bees remaining into the Langstroth for them to draw it out with new beeswax.
- You add the queen to the Top Bar Hive and shake in 4-6 frames of bees
- Then put the Top Bar hive in place of the original Langstroth so it can gain all the worker bees and move the Langstroth hive to a new location.
- The Langstroth hive will raise a new queen with all of their hefty resources.
Rachel cuts a Lang Frame to fit a Top Bar comb saver |
5. Candle making- I taught Candle Making/Wax Products classes to groups that had already had a top bar hive donated and transferred from a Langstroth so that they have a way to make money with the wax they would begin harvesting. There is no local wick manufacturer so I pressed the idea of wick experimentation. Try using hemp rope, strips of wood, wicker harvested from the jungle.
Jessie teaching candles and mold making |
6. Recipe Building. As Jamaican's start producing more beeswax, I gave them a basic lip balm recipe and taught them how to build on it to produce different products. People pay more money for beeswax that has not been treated with miticides. Here is the gist:
- Lipbalm= 1 part any oil (for moisturizing) + 1 part beeswax (for hardening)
- Thick Lotion= oil + beeswax + thick oil, like cocoa butter (for body)
- Mosquito Balm= oil + beeswax + lemongrass oil
- Healing salve= oil + beeswax + healing oils like calendula, lavender, etc.
- Petroleum Jelly= baby oil + beeswax
7. No winter. Did you know there is no winter in Jamaica? I had to keep wrapping my brain about the idea of Nectar flow and Dearth instead of Winter and summer. In the height of summer, around July-August it is so hot that trees aren't producing nectar. You have to view this as our winter and build up your hives to have at least 12 combs to survive these tough months.
Top Bar Model Apiary at Yerba Buena Farm |
8. Top Bar Hive Management. Pests, disease? No worries, try different management techniques that I use all the time with Top Bar.
- Wax Moths- harvest some of your comb, the bees have too much to protect.
- Foulbrood- if you hold your comb up to the sun and can't see through it, time to harvest it out of the hive and let the bees draw new comb. That black comb harbors disease, feces, cocoon buildup. As Agape Adams calls it, a sewer!
- Chalkbrood- Requeen and make sure they aren't getting exposed to fungicides
- Mites- Requeen for hygienic behavior, aka. bees clean the mites off each other
Standing room only, Westmoreland Bee Assoc. |
9. Jamaicans laugh at all my jokes. No seriously, Jamaicans get New Mexico dry humor and I went to great lengths to help beekeepers enjoy learning Top Bar Hives. I love this country and would love to return!
St. Mary's Bee Club |
4/26/13
Beeyard Date
My hubby and I getting cuddly in the beeyard at Yerba Buena Farm, Jamaica surrounded by sugar cane, banana trees and of course... bees.
4/25/13
Swarm Gift
Had a delightful swarm gift experience today. Clay, the bird man at the local Albuquerque Zoo gave me a call saying that the zoo had a melon shaped swarm, he had caught it in a couple of boxes and wanted someone to pick it up. Took me about 15 minutes to throw my girls in the car and pick up some free bees! As always, I'm dumbstruck by random acts of kindness and generosity.
Waiting at the zoo for free bees |
The swarm, packed up in tidy packages |
The top bar hive is prepped with 1:4 sugar water |
Gave them a frame of brood to entice the swarm to stay |
The swarm after I shook them into the hive |
Fanning the nazanoff scent, saying "this is a great place to live, come find us" |
Japan is back in business with a new hive |
Clay and I chatted bees and he told me his "hero" story of catching the swarm and his coworkers being amazed at his daring!
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