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217 lines
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217 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2153
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Title: HPR2153: Splitting a Block of Bees Wax
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2153/hpr2153.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 14:59:11
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---
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This is HPR episode 2153 entitled, Clitting and Lock on Beanwax.
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It is hosted by Brian and is about 18 minutes long.
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The summary is, I need to split and lock on Beanwax.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Get your web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthost.com.
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Hello, this is Brian.
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Once again, I have something that I need to do.
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I'm going to do the John Cope style, talk to you guys through it.
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I enjoy Jezros fixing a plastic boat.
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So I always think about it when I do this because I got myself a heat gun for my project.
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What I'm doing is cutting a big block of beeswax.
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Went down to get a friend of mine, a five gallon bucket of raw honey from one of the local
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beekeepers.
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So while I was there, I got myself a big old jar of honey myself.
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He was getting some beeswax.
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The beekeeper says, well, I do have a block, I don't know what it weighs.
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Let's see, he weighs it and it's eight pounds of beeswax.
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Friend of mine has only got $20 on him, extra.
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So in addition to buying the honey, I just bought my honey from him, left me with $7 in
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my pocket.
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When he weighs it out, he's like, oh, well, I got a, I'm going to have to chip a bunch
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of wax off of this.
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And I said, well, what do you want for the whole block?
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They wanted $28.
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He had $20.
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I had $7.
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He took all our money for honey and wax.
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End up with the whole block.
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He says it's weighs a pounds, I believe, and a really cool old scale.
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It's been sitting there for a bit and I just haven't gotten around a quartering it because
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he put in his $20.
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I put in my $7.
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So what I got here is a turntable, me growing up and the folks around me called the lazy
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Susan.
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It's on some dry bearing, so I use it for clay and I leave it up in the rain.
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So, oops, there's my knife on the floor.
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I've also got a big old knife, kitchen knife, that is fairly cheap, not so sharp, but
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it will work great for purposes.
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I got my heat gun.
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I'm going to heat this knife and I'm going to press it through this wax and I assume
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that it's going to take me multiple heatings, it's lice through this wax.
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So the first thing I'm going to do is put aside my knife and my heat and then I got
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another spool of twine here, something cotton sturdy and I'm going to begin by marking
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half in the top with it's still on my spool because I really don't know what it is going
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to take.
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I'm about to get this.
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So maybe I should just take a few feet off of it, grab my knife, see if it's sharp
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enough to cut my twine and it is just not so sharp for slicing a steak or getting through
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the good skin of a hardy vegetable or something.
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Alright, so I got my top pretty much halved, I'm going to flip it upside down.
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I got a piece of hardy backer which is a brand name which is concrete board, backer
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board for tiles and it's awesome for doing clay because it soaks up the moisture and
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it's sturdy, it doesn't deform when it soaks up the moisture, it can even take a little
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bit of heat but I just happen to have it out because I was doing a clay project that
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threw a piece of brown paper over it so I only wax all over my clay board and now I got
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this string upside down going across the bottom of my thing which is really the top of
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my thing because it was cast in a bucket.
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And now what I want to do is I want to mark half on the bottom, mark it in the way
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I'm doing this as I'm placing my string on the corners of the wax block where I am just
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eyeing half.
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So and then I'm pulling it tight and I did this on up to and by pulling it tight it sticks
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into the wax.
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So now I've got my corners marked on the top and the bottom and I'm going to take the
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handle of my knife and I'm going to press the string into the side of just on the back
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corner handle just so I get a solid line all the way down this side that I can follow
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when I go to slice it.
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And really I only have to make my half line here and then I'll make my half line again
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once I have a half.
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So that he gets a solid half with no marks and I get a solid quarter with no marks.
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He also gets that other quarter.
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So I almost got my string.
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My string is now pressed into both sides and that's really all that I need.
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So it's incredible, I'm looking at the bottom and it's just loaded with propolis, I really
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keep her, had a facility to process this propolis also.
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It's so good for you, Midas.
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But he has, I was speaking with someone the other day, he's a very good example of someone
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whose operation is super efficient.
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His workflow has been tailored to accommodate him collecting honey.
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So he works from his house, he's got a two car garage with his big old honey spinner
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drippers and slicers and everything there, but it's all geared towards making honey, none
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of it's geared towards harvesting any of the other products that come along with beekeeping.
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So it would be real difficult for him to bring someone else in too.
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Now I would love for him to get his propolis, but when I even go there to get the honey,
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he's like, oh yeah, there's some blobs over there and there's some blobs over there.
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You can just take it, but it would be a whole separate operation.
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His operation is gathering honey and it works well for him that way.
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So come on beeswax flipped over.
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I got my lines in the side from my string, I'm about to plug in my heat gun.
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This is the fun part because now it actually sounds like something's happening because
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I get to use a big old freaking heat gun.
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Heat gun is basically a high powered hairdryer that goes super hot and blows.
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So I hope this works well and first, actually, I'm looking at my workspace and because I'm
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so incredibly not paying attention, I just realized that if I do it like this, I won't
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have anywhere to set my hand.
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So I'm going to bring half of my hearty backer off of the block, I'm going to hold
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my knife up against this and I'm going to grab myself a towel because a towel is about
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as good as I'm going to get here on the floor of my kitchen.
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Okay, ready to go, got my towel, got my heat gun, got my knife.
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So I will grab my knife.
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I do have a decent wooden handle on this knife so I'm expecting the center of it where
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the tang of the blade comes down to get warm but not the knife itself.
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Here we go.
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Step number one, on knife and heat gun hold because I haven't run yet, we're going to see
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how well this works.
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It is these racks so I really shouldn't need incredibly hot nights.
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We're just going to kind of gauge a little bit, I'm running my heat gun all the way up
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the side, put my knife over, run it all the way up the side, trying to get it just the
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edge of it really.
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I don't want to hold it because most likely this thing is going to wobble and I go to
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chop it and heat gun off, sit that down on my tiles, grab my knife, line up my marks and
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first press go.
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Well, I didn't let my knife quite get hot enough but okay, it starts working.
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Here we go.
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Heat gun on, I think I'm going to leave it here for a second, let the heat gun really
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warm up.
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I'm sure whoever was listening to this familiar heat gun was just saying, that ain't
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working hard enough to get this hot, there's my hot, there's the crappy little fucking
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heat gun.
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This heat gun until yesterday really wasn't even operating, yesterday I decided that
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I was going to try to build myself, my water filter prototype, I just got waxed and
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I'm bored.
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Well, that doesn't matter, I can deal with that, it's just a scrap board anyway.
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So I built myself a water filter test, I fussed about the clay that I built from a good
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recipe from the potters for these guys and the clay was a little too wet so I just smushed
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the middle of the bucket and decided that I was going to use my heat gun to try to
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cure it on the way up so I didn't have to roll a slab with my clay.
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I could just utilize whatever it was that I wanted to utilize.
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So here we go, step number two, press into the clay or into the wax, of course it's clay
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to me.
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And it seems to be melting, okay, this is such a large piece of what's going to take
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it whole, actually warm, it's still moving so I'm going to keep going in a little bit.
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I haven't quite gotten to it with my blade yet.
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You guys needed an example, I'm going to flip this heat gun back on, keep blabbering
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away, hose to heat gun and I'm going to spin this actually so I can melt my wax on
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my ground paper here.
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So I made this water filter, I pressed it, what I did is I took the soft clay that was
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in the bucket, storing clay you want to keep it in a soft state, little softer than fully
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workable if you're me anyway because it might be a year or two before you get to that piece
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of clay.
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This batch I made over three years ago, the reason I never utilized it, oh god, this
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smells so incredibly good, it smells like honey, the reason I never utilized my clay is because
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I'm going to have to fire it to such a low temperature that it doesn't actually burn
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the charcoal out of my filter.
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So my filter will be hopefully, it's just a prototype, hopefully it will have approximately
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half an hour or half a gallon per hour, flow rate and it will also be impregnated with
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activated charcoal.
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That's going to be nice.
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So I took my clay, I put a layer of newspaper in my bucket, smushed my clay into the
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bucket, made sure it was thin, it was even and because my clay was so soft, it was difficult
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to make sure it was even because I couldn't go all flat like I said, I used my heat gun
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and for about six months my heat gun's been broken.
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But I just had this feeling and I went down and I grabbed my heat gun and it was very
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nice.
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So here I go, third pressing of the blade into the block of beeswax and this section has
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been edited for a future HPR show, now back to our wax.
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This beeswax is definitely going to work, I'm about three or four inches down my block.
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I think my episode is going to be done though because it's basically just going to be this
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heat gun run in and I have a feeling it's going to take me a good solid 35, 40 minutes
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to do it properly without making a giant mess.
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Well I can't let my episode end that way, took me maybe 15 minutes, got my wax cut,
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unfortunately I got a little overzealous on my pressure with my first split and didn't
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score enough all the way around.
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So I got some chipping, so my nice clean piece I don't get, he gets to nice clean pieces
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and because of the way things were going I think I'm actually going to seal them together
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since I got my heat gun and my knife out.
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So it looks fucking gorgeous, there's this core in the middle of extra fluffy just like
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mmm god it's so this wax is just sliced right off of the top of the honeycombs, takes
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a big hot knife slices the caps off, sticks them in a spinner, spins the honey out and
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has a drainer that he drained into afterwards just because he has so many they get sitting
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there and there's always a little bit extra.
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I remember when my uncle when I was younger had bees with his buddies and they'd go out
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and they'd all collect their stuff and they'd spin them out but then they'd instantly
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take their drawers and stick them back in the hives and he's he actually swaps the
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hives out before or the slats and the drawers, so he goes he collects the drawers, sticks
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a new drawer, sticks the queen back in the middle, there's a little more to it than that
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but that's basically his operation.
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My operation here though is done and I'm going to call this a success that I could not
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have asked for when picking the propolis out of my frickin' honey, there's a significant
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amount of honey left in, this wax is going to be used to make sobs, I'll make myself
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a few, maybe that'll be another episode, seeing as I just did a double episode, I was thinking
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I would just cut that out, my frickin' end lift babbling about frickin' cloppy, normally
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I don't talk while I don't, especially don't talk about things off topic and I kind
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of lose track of what I'm doing if I try to talk about something else, I mean right
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now I can talk about talking and clean my knife and I'm doing it, but I wanted to say thanks
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for everybody out there, I had a public read for the shows you've been doing, I listened
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to them and I'm going to extend in the old Linux outlaws forums, I'm a potter as you
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can tell, but since Dan and Fass Mug sent Jesu and I built a couple of mugs one time
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of time, Jesu actually got the best, and I keep thinking about I sent him, it's slightly
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squared off, probably holds, I don't know, 11 ounces or so, but me and that was one of my
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favorite pieces at that point in time, those were my student lines, but I tried to send
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my better ones out, my memory serves me, and I built a gotta, got a big old monkey grip
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look and cut, I would like to extend the, like I said, offer that I once extended in
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the forums to Lost in Bronx since he lives in my neighborhood as much as in my neighborhood
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could be around here, that if he ever is in Flagstaff, stop on by, he can have a pot,
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I got a mugs in here, anybody, you stop by, you find me, send me an email, I got pots,
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so I think I'll leave my RAM lens in, seeing as RAM lens about what I'm doing, I got wax
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cut, I got pictures going in the computer somehow, I'm gonna rescan that post on the message
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on the email list about attaching other files so that I can get those up there properly,
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but have a good day!
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You've been listening to Heka Public Radio at HekaPublicRadio.org, we are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday, today's show, like all
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
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is released on the Creative Commons Attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
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