Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Wed, 14 Sep 1994 11:17:45 AEST+1000 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
> received is fine. However, I think you're implying that because the
> honey is uncapped then it won't keep. (It's unripe.) This would be
Also, for people who have mild allergy to honey, uncapped honey is
generaly a lot more irritating then the capped stuff.
> the water. The bees are eternal optimists. If the cells aren't full
> they leave them uncapped in the hope of more nectar becoming available.
Um...I don't know about this...do you have any evidence to support
this?? I have seen bees cap a frame of cells less than half full,
just as I have seen them having not yet capped great big bulging
three-times-their-normal-thickness frames (I love it when they do
that)
I could still be wrong. If you have evidence that ripened honey
remains uncapped, please tell me. I would asume that because of the
hygroscopic nature of honey, if it is left uncapped to long, it will
start taking up water again.
Adrian.
|
|
|