Nov 2011 - Kearsarge Beekeepers Association
Transcription
Nov 2011 - Kearsarge Beekeepers Association
Kearsarge Beekeepers Association Nov./Dec. 2011 www.kbanh.org Volume VIII Issue 6 Business Meeting Minutes then More on Marklin’s Next Page: About 25 KBA members held the September meeting inside the candle making area. At the meeting in November, a Nomination Panel will be formed to bring forth candidates for elections which will follow in January. Mary, as Treasurer, reported we currently have enough money to pay for a speaker at the winter meeting and anyone with a suggestion for speaker should forward the name to an officer (Troy Hall, Bob Naylor, Mary Lloyd-Evans, Robin Gray or Gayle). The next meeting of the NH State Beekeepers is October 22nd 9am-3pm (doors open at 8:30am) at Wasserman Park in Merrimack, NH. A researcher in bee nutrition will be the speaker. Must pre-register for a meal by Oct. 17th, Go to the website for the form: www.nhbeekeepers.org. Recommendations for speakers at the Spring State Meeting are welcome. Contact an officer if you are interested in more information about the NH State Beekeepers Assoc. or see their website. The NH State Beekeepers hold a liability insurance policy which costs just under $1000 and they invite club donations to support that. Discussion indicated our club will continue to donate, and will formally make the motion at the November meeting. It was the concensus that honey production is about over for the year, and honey consumption by the hives during the rainy weather was appreciable. Club members said they have taken a few lbs. of honey to as much as 1200 pounds this season. Feeding has begun in some bee yards intentionally or unintentionally as in Peter's hummingbird feeder that the bees raided. Troy suggested 1/2" hardware cloth cut to length of the hive entrance and folded Dues for 2011 are $15.00. Martin and over to a free-standing shape will keep mice out, Christine Mail to: with timing recommendations varying from Sept. 1 Marklin have a Mary Lloyd-Evans to at least by first frost. He also said he has a target 50,000 sq. ft. PO Box 88 weight of 150 lbs. for a hive with 2 deep supers and building in Andover, NH 03231 one medium full of honey on top, with the bees Contoocook now consolidating themselves for overwintering. that houses a During the business meeting, we were served woodworking Newsletter Newsletter Printed Courtesy of Sugar River shop, a candlemaking factory and a candle decorating homemade popcorn by Anna and Simeon Marklin, and coffee was offered. Other family members BanK BanK business. They also have several rooms of unused office space that have become storefront rooms, open include Matthias, and Judith. The Marklins also gave Tuesday through Saturday, filled with their own and club members a 2x5 inch candle!! Next Meeting local artisan craftware including clothing, jewelry, books, candles, cards. The next meeting will be our annual Holiday Potluck and it will be held at the East Andover Fri. Nov. 11, 2011 Grange (same place as last year see directions on 6pm (you’re welcome to back) on Nov. 11th. . Dinner is at 6pm though people come at 5:30 to visit and are invited to gather at 5:30 to visit and help set up. set up) at the East Andover Mary Lloyd-Evans and Peter Zac are once again Grange donating and preparing a turkey. Members are asked to bring a side dish or dessert or beverage to Officers: complement the turkey. President Please RSVP to Mary and Peter (603)735-5058 Troy Hall 252-9564 or email [email protected]. They’d like to know Vice President how many are coming and the type of dish you plan Bob Naylor 863-1136 to bring. This is always a fun time with good food and good Treasurer humor and the Andover Grange is a cozy place. Mary Lloyd-Evans 735-5058 We will have a raffle at that meeting so please bring a raffle prize if you can. Any extra bee Co-treasurer products or equipment, homemade things, harvested Robin Gray 927-4127 produce, saved seeds, or as always, re-gifts and Secretary miscellany are welcome. Proceeds go toward our Gayle Bates 938-5325 postage. Contents: Minutes from Last Meeting pg. 1-2 Minutes Sept. Mtg Martha and Bob Naylor filled in for Gayle and pg.3 Thank you’s & other recorded the last meeting at Marklin Candle Design news in Contoocook. Martha has written the following pg. 4-9 pictures & articles minutes of that meeting and Bob took the pictures. Many thanks to them for a great job!! KBA’s newsletter is published 6 times per year. As 2 year members of the KBA, the Marklin family The newsletter is included in invited KBA members to see how they use beeswax. the yearly dues for members. For special occasions they light a large (10" diameter For a sample copy send your by 12"height?) outside candle within their name and address to: landscaping, and graced us with that welcome, as Gayle Bates well as lighting many smaller candles along the PO Box 421 walkway. South Sutton, NH 03273 Next Meeting: The Marklin candle adventure began in 1985 when Martin, in the seminary studying to be a priest, thrust himself into the business by stepping in when an elderly Polish woman passed away. She had made the church Easter candle for years and no one knew how she had done it. Martin experimented in his parents' basement in St. Louis, sold 6 candles to churches his first year, then 18, then 35, then 75, then 150 and now about 1800 each year. It took him 15 years to perfect the process of removing wax from the candle surface and pouring molten colored wax into the design grooves and this is now a proprietary process. Competitors slapped on decals. In 1989, he moved into a Nashua, NH barn, then to mill buildings, and for 10 years has been in Contoocook in a former electronics building alongside his home on 8.5 acres. They are Only 7 companies produce church candles in the U.S. (3 in Syracuse where German immigrants settled with the business) and 6 of them are M-K, Cathedral, Dadant, AI Root, General Wax and Marklin. The three methods of producing candles are molding, extruding and over-dipping. Molding creates a very hard candle and is difficult to carve. Overdipping has adhesion and bubble issues. Though he began by purchasing overdipped candles, Marklin now uses his own molded candles which are then over-dipped, giving the outer 1/8" a softer, more workable surface to carve. He adds no scent or color to his wax candle, except for the obvious art design colors, and utilizes the wax's natural fragrance of citrus, wildflowers, etc, depending on where the wax comes from. Other companies (Yankee Candles) sell paraffin candles with added color and fragrance. Marklin's buys 30,000 pounds of wax annually, 10,000 lbs at a time through an established supplier who gets his wax from all over the world. Marklin can buy in slab or pellets and prefers pellets. The price of wax is directly related to the honey supply, with apiaries keeping their hives (and wax) during shortages of honey. Marklin is very selective, and considers the wax melting point, ester value, saponification, hardness, etc. A typical hive has 2-3 lbs of wax. Equatorial countries are said to have the best wax for bleaching. Wax can be dark to light yellow, with white, and the ivory desired by churches, created by bleaching. Formerly, slabs of wax were laid in the sun to bleach, with a lot of beeswax refineries located on Long Island because Manhattan property was too expensive. Now with LI property so expensive, chemical bleaching is used. Marklin has fabricated and reused many things in his industry, such as a restaurant kettle, a naval battleship kettle, keilbasa tanks, and vodka distillery pipes. All equipment is stainless steel as currently the "smallest, youngest and best candle-making company copper or brass would tinge things green. in the U.S." He is able to compete based on his direct market Production only allows for molding one tank per day and approach, using no middleman. The church has an established unmolding one per day, by hand. It takes about 1 hour per inch of policy of supporting the arts, which helps in the fine craft business diameter to mold a candle. He dips half the candle, then turns it of Marklin's candle making. over and dips the other half to create even diameter candles, top to bottom, and uses a sizer to make things uniform. Marklin offers Martin currently works with another employee in the woodworking 25 sizes, 28 designs, 2 colors and custom orders. shop which produces altars and other pieces of church furniture except pews. Overall, the company employs 25 people and provides 1/2 of the cathedrals in the U.S. with candles, with Catholic and Episcopalian using the most. Marklin adheres to the former rule (as determined by local Bishops) that candles must be 50% beeswax and produces candles that are 51% select, high quality beeswax. Parafin, an oilbased product, at about $1/lb. compared to $4/lb. for beeswax, makes up the rest of the candle. 100% beeswax candles are difficult to mold and hard to carve, and buyers won't pay the extra expense for them. Candles make up about 20% of wax consumption, with pharmaceuticals/coating on pills, and beauty products using the other 80%. Candles are 20% of the paraffin market, with coatings of produce, waxed Oriented Strand Board in the lumber industry, tires-with 1 lb of paraffin in every tire- using the other 80%. With wax having a high coefficient of expansion and contraction, dipped candles can pull the wick off center. All the other companies now extrude their candles (pressing pellets together.) Paraffin candles need flat braid wicks; beeswax candles need square braid wicks. The diameter of the candle determines the size of the wick needed. An orange, robust flame with no black smoke is what is desired. If black smoke is seen, it indicates an inefficient burn and the wick needs to be cut. Underwicking is indicated by a solid ring of wax around the burn; overwicking produces a drip. Marklin slightly overwicks so there is a tiny bit of black smoke, but you can always see the burning flame (never hidden by a solid core of wax around it.) Candle decorating takes a year to train a good decorator. The decorator carves out the pattern and fills in with colored wax on a horizontal candle, only 20-30% of the surface of the design at a time, to keep the wax from running down the sides of the candle. A good decorator can fuse each segment of color to the old, almost cool segment previously done, with little or no 'seam' between the segments. Decorations include 22 carat gold, sterling silver, and different textures including a hammered look. Pigments are more colorfast but clog the capillaries in the wick. Aniline is not colorfast and will fade in sunlight/windows. 70% of Marklin's business is done in the 3 months before Easter, and no decorating is done before an order is placed. Long hours require encouragement, exemplified by his BIOB banner, short for Bring It On Baby, as no order is turned away. He offers a buyback program for unused portions of his candles at $2.50/lb. Learning from his good friend, Simon Pearce and his personalization of glass-blowing marks, Marklin has applied for a patent for 'tradedress' which indicates the look and feel of a specialty commodity. Instead of cutting off the extra wick that is used to hang the candles during production, he now utilizes that extra wick, and the knot he ties to hang the candles, with a wax seal as an indication of hand-dipped candles. Although churches are the more common buyers for his candles, he also has made them for South West Airlines, Boston College, marriage candles, an indian reservation in Montana recently, and other private uses. A 5" candle, the largest hand-dipped in the U.S. may sell for $1400. Shipping costs to Guam adds $1200. The End ******************************** Thank You’s to: The Marklin Family for their hospitality and generosity and giving us the opportunity to see how their beautiful craft is done Martha and Bob Naylor for the reporting and photos of the Marklin tour and Sept. mtg. Those members who sent articles, recipes etc… The Big “E” By the time this newsletter reaches you the Eastern States Expo ("The Big E") will have passed for this year but there are some good things to know for next year. The expo has a NH state building with a booth manned by members of NH bee clubs. Anyone willing to help out at the booth earns a fun time; all the Blueberry Pie, Ice Cream and Cheddar Cheese Soup in a bread bowl they can eat, as well as free admission to the fair and free parking. They like to have up to 20 people staffing the booth with 2.5 hour shifts, then 4 hours off. The booth earns $700-$900 which is prorated among the clubs who help cover the booth. The fair is generally the last 2 weeks of Sept. and there is a website. Volunteer Opportunity The club will be looking for a secretary for 2012. It’s a great way to learn more about beekeeping through doing the newsletter and to help a good organization. You also get to work with some really nice people. The nominating committee will be formed at the next meeting so if you’re interested, please let one of them know. Calendar October 22nd New Hampshire Beekeepers Assoc. fall meeting 9a-3pm, doors open at 8:30am, at Wasserman Park in Merrimack, NH. There will be a speaker on bee nutrition. Must pre-register by Oct. 17th for a meal. Go to the website for the registration form: www.nhbeekeepers.org. Fri. Nov. 11th at 6pm KBA Holiday Potluck Dinner at the East Andover Grange. Doors open at 5:30pm for set-up.