Getting Your Bees!
The Country Smallholder|Spring 2025
Claire Waring looks at how you can obtain your first colony and become a beekeeper.
Claire Waring
Getting Your Bees!

This is one of the most exciting parts of becoming a beekeeper. You have done the preparation and now you are going to get your bees and finally start beekeeping.

So, how can you acquire bees? You can buy them or get them free by catching a swarm.

CATCHING A SWARM

While the swarm option sounds like a great idea, it is not without its risks. Firstly, there is actually catching it. When a swarm leaves the hive, it will cluster together nearby. I always think of it as pausing to make sure everyone is present and correct. It will then fly off to occupy its chosen cavity and establish the new nest.

The best time for a beekeeper to intervene in this process is when the bees are clustering. The classic swarm hangs neatly from a branch at around head height. It can then be knocked off into a skep or other container and taken to the apiary. Here it is put into a hive. It settles down and all is well. That's the classic swarm.

However, bees will be bees so there are great variations on this theme. The cluster can be low to the ground or high up in a tree. It can be spread out over (and inside) a hedge. I have collected swarms from under the wheel arch of a car and down a road drain! If you want to collect a swarm, I would take an experienced beekeeper with you, at least for the first couple of times.

The other drawback to a swarm is that you don't know if the bees are carrying a disease and you have no idea of their temperament or propensity to swarm. Bad tempered bees spoil the pleasure of beekeeping and really swarmy bees are a pain to deal with and are unlikely to give you a very good crop of honey.

If you do start with a swarm, keep it away from any other colonies you may have acquired for at least a month so that you can then inspect the full brood cycle for disease and can assess the bees' temperament.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Spring 2025-Ausgabe von The Country Smallholder.

Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Spring 2025-Ausgabe von The Country Smallholder.

Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.

WEITERE ARTIKEL AUS THE COUNTRY SMALLHOLDERAlle anzeigen
Share in the therapy sheep experience
The Country Smallholder

Share in the therapy sheep experience

The chance to win one of ten books in a series designed to empower young minds where 'Merlin finds his magic'

time-read
2 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
What uses are their for cockerels?
The Country Smallholder

What uses are their for cockerels?

In this issue we want to touch on a subject that may ruffle a few feathers, but as a national charity helping 60,000 hens year in and year out we believe the topic merits some hard facts and an appeal for your support as readers of a popular poultry magazine.

time-read
5 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
All About Grafting - an historic form of propagation
The Country Smallholder

All About Grafting - an historic form of propagation

Lee Senior explains the top technique for gaining increased vigour, disease resistance, yield and speed

time-read
6 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
Time to get seed sowing
The Country Smallholder

Time to get seed sowing

Kings Seeds give a guide to a flourishing veg patch that starts in spring

time-read
2 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
Welcome to our feature on alpacas!
The Country Smallholder

Welcome to our feature on alpacas!

We've asked experts to share their knowledge with us on keeping alpacas, their handling and their fleeces.

time-read
3 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
Getting Your Bees!
The Country Smallholder

Getting Your Bees!

Claire Waring looks at how you can obtain your first colony and become a beekeeper.

time-read
6 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
The springtime pecking order
The Country Smallholder

The springtime pecking order

Spring brings new life and fresh challenges to the coop. Cara Wheeldon discovers how to smoothly introduce new birds, curb bullying, and keep your flock happy and harmonious with help from expert advice.

time-read
6 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
Keep the date of Sunday 8th June free for an Open Farm Sunday near you
The Country Smallholder

Keep the date of Sunday 8th June free for an Open Farm Sunday near you

But could you open your smallholding or farm and take part in this event that brings farmers and consumers together?

time-read
2 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
A wheelbarrow is an essential tool on any smallholding, but what is the best choice for a smallholder?
The Country Smallholder

A wheelbarrow is an essential tool on any smallholding, but what is the best choice for a smallholder?

Wheelbarrows come in all shapes, sizes (and price ranges too). After years of rusted tubs, flat tyres and strained muscles, Hugh and Fiona have distilled the right choice of wheelbarrow into five simple choices.

time-read
4 Minuten  |
Spring 2025
The Hamburgh, an old British light breed from the North
The Country Smallholder

The Hamburgh, an old British light breed from the North

Victoria Roberts BVSc MRCVS tells how Yorks and Lancs came together to produce an attractive breed and a useful layer

time-read
2 Minuten  |
Spring 2025