For a number of years already, many people I know have been noticing that instead of the 25 hours or more they used to stay lit and be needed, nowadays, they don't last even twenty-four 24 hours.
To be honest, twenty-four 24 hours are not enough for some purposes. They really need to stay lit for twenty-five 25 hours. That's because if you have it lit on Rosh Hashanah in order to light the second night, that's twenty-five 25 hours after being lit. If there's no light/fire, one can't light the Holy Day candles. In my neighborhood, we've all come to each other's house in a panic looking for a light/fire to light from. And then we have to very carefully go from house to house with the lit candle to be used to light another. Sometimes, because we were too young to think of having Yartzeit candles in our homes, and the logistics of getting everything ready we'd forget, but more often, we lit, but the candle didn't stay lit long enough.
The candle needs to be still going strong after twenty-five hours for Yom Kippur, too, since it's traditional to light the Havdalah candle from a burning flame, lit before the fast/holiday.
For years already, I've been using candles that say 48 or 72 hours because of this problem. Before the Yom Kippur fast began, just seconds before lighting the holiday candles, like for Shabbat, I lit two different Yartzeit candles. One was one of those 24 hour ones, and the other a 48 (actually 50 according to the label) hour one. I'm sure you're not surprised that only one of them was still lit when we came home from shul. And in case you don't know, our shul is just behind the house, so we didn't need to travel or take a long walk.
A neighbor had asked to come for Havdala, since her candle had gone out pretty early. She said that many others had complained to the company and never received replies. So after we ate, I decided to blog about the issue and the suggesting that people do what I do and get longer-lasting candles. To do this I took some photos of the candles. And what do you think I discovered?
Not only don't the candle manufacturers attempt to give you enough wax for the needed 25 hours, which was once the norm, they now protect themselves by writing on the can in Hebrew and English:
"Burns About 24 Hours"Next time you're buying, check to see what it is. They sure don't make 'em like they used to...
I also encountered this problem. May I suggest that in addition to buying from a reputable company you place the candle away from any draught, ac vent, fan, or open window. If the flame flickers wildly when you light the candle it is a sign that the wax will be consumed rapidly in its current location.
ReplyDeleteFor yom tov (as opposed to a yahrtzeit) I try to avoid the cheqper candles in the metal cans and use one in a glass container, een their 24 hour candles tend to last longer.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I sometimes cheat - if before you light the candle you are worried that it won't last the full 25 hours, take a simple 2 hour tea-light, remove the wick, and place the wick from the 24 hour candle through the hole of the tea light. This should give your candle an extra 2-3 hours.
(Although one year I tried this, and even with the tea light the candle burnt out before I got home from shul on Motzei yom kippur).
Just like with everything else we must read the fine print.
ReplyDeleteFor this YK, I took a regular tea light and added it to the "24-hour" candle. With that addition, not only did it last all the way until Havdalah - it lasted through most of the next night as well! Strange. But yes, I have this frustration every time and often wind up spending more money to get the 48-hr candle.
ReplyDeleteThat's good, but someone commented on fb that it doesn't always work, either. The price difference isn't all that great. Even the 48 hour ones don't cost all that much.
ReplyDelete