Nice!Sometimes you get lucky, the landowner where I keep my bees called me tonight and said ‘I think you have had a swarm there is a massive clump of bees on one of the empty hives’
So I went over and had a look, checked my hives (i inspected them Friday and didn’t think it was one of mine but looked anyway) - not a swarm from one of my hives, so a nice prime swarm for me and it landed about 5m away from my hives in my pallet of spare nucs and old frames
I love free bees
Now all in a nuc, couple of handfuls scooped in and the others marched right in. Bit of feed on and I will look at them in a week!
View attachment 82233
I was hoping the swarm season was over. I've managed to not have any of my colonies swarm this year, well so far.Sometimes you get lucky, the landowner where I keep my bees called me tonight and said ‘I think you have had a swarm there is a massive clump of bees on one of the empty hives’
So I went over and had a look, checked my hives (i inspected them Friday and didn’t think it was one of mine but looked anyway) - not a swarm from one of my hives, so a nice prime swarm for me and it landed about 5m away from my hives in my pallet of spare nucs and old frames
I love free bees
Now all in a nuc, couple of handfuls scooped in and the others marched right in. Bit of feed on and I will look at them in a week!
View attachment 82233
That's what I do with all sorts of bees. I not a fan of feeding, just pick them up and place on a suitable flower in the sunshine. Often bees can get cold, not just in need of food, so putting them on a sunny plant can warm them enough.So I carefully scooped up the bee on to a twig and then deposited him on a bunch of flower heads. I saw him greedily lapping up the nectar, which was encouraging.
I just hope he could get enough to build up his strength and fly off safely and strongly.
Yeah tbh it’s a bit late for the queen to get sorted and laying her winter bees. I popped them in a nuc and fed them and will see how they do! Worst case scenario is I combine them with my smallest hive and snuff a queenNice!
Although this year, I could have done without all the free bees that settled in my apiary. Had more than enough hives as was and then more and more swarms seemed to be attracted to it.
Yeah will snuff a queen, probably the swarm queen as she is unknownI was hoping the swarm season was over. I've managed to not have any of my colonies swarm this year, well so far.
How are your other bees settling in? As clam as expected? Are you likely to requeen the swarm or keep them as is?
I lost two colonies over winter and one has gone quite small, but the others are looking ok. Not minding too much as wanted to reduce the numbers anyway.How's everyone's colonies doing? As ever, it's been a funny old start to the year. A couple of weeks ago the NBU were sending out starvation alerts and after a couple of days sunshine most of mine need their 2nd super.
Nice one!View attachment 87773
We had a nice prime swarm land in some of our equipment on Saturday. A lovely marked Buckfast queen that someone will definitely be missing.
It was a slow start to the season, but everything is kicking off now. We manage around 15 apiary sites, so rushing to get round them all before they swarm or backfill the brood boxes with honey.
Do you have a photo of a dead bee? Any answer might depend on one what bees you have.In the interests of the bees' welfare, and our sanity can any of you bee keepers suggest a way of getting rid of them?
Thanks for that. Unfortunately our grandson is now too big to send up the chimney.My friend had bees in her chimney, also a woodburner. Very expensive quotes from the bee removal people, even if she could find someone willing to do it. The trouble is, you can't reach them to get the bees out. It's a big job. In the end, she just put up with them.
Try leaving a shallow saucer of sugar and water on the windowsill so exhausted bees can get a drink and energy boost untill you can rescue them and set them free.
It's a problem. Try the local beekeeping society for contacts for removal. They could " bee" a problem if they block the chimney, so it will need sorting, especially if it's a modern chimney. Luckily, my friends chimney was very large as it was in a very old house. (The sort that they'd send boys up to sweep in older times) so it wasn't too bad a problem as regards blocking the chimney, but the fireplace had been made smaller ,(so no access for small boys any longer.) Would have had to knock out the whole lower chimney and rebuild, on top of the bee removal fee. !
Good luck sorting it.
On a day with good weather and a forecast for nice settled weather, light a very smokey fire (colder smoke is better for the bees) in the middle of the day and drive them out. Have someone outside to spot that they’re going and where they end up if possible, so that they can be collected and given a proper home (or hope that they find a natural home somewhere).Over the last week or so by using the glass and card method we've rescued dozens of bees which have got into our sitting room and then try to escape through a closed and unopenable window. Those we don't rescue die of exhaustion fairly quickly. We have worked out that they are coming down the chimney, into the woodburner where some, but not all, find a way out into the room. We have tried lighting a smoky fire in the stove but as soon as the fire went cold they were back. We suspect they are nesting in the chimney.
In the interests of the bees' welfare, and our sanity can any of you bee keepers suggest a way of getting rid of them?