Getting Your Bees!
The Country Smallholder
|Spring 2025
Claire Waring looks at how you can obtain your first colony and become a beekeeper.
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.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition Spring 2025 de The Country Smallholder.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Country Smallholder
The Country Smallholder
How hand tools shaped the countryside
Farming and smallholding practices have altered over the past century or so. Some have been subtle, others less so and many brought about by technology and legislation. In the penultimate of his series, Jeremy Hobson continues to outline just a few of them.
2 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
The National Honey Show receives The King's Award for Voluntary Service
The National Honey Show, the world's largest honey show and beekeeping convention but run entirely by volunteers in Surrey, has been awarded The King's Award for Voluntary Service for 2025.
1 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
New Year's Resolutions are never kept - don't make any
So says gardener Andrew Oldham and he tells us why he holds this unconventional view – see if you agree
5 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
Want to Gather Your Own Firewood?
Why Owning a Woodland Might Be the Answer
2 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
Finding out about what happens to fleeces when they leave the farm
Josephine Laing takes up the offer of a visit to a British Wood depot and finds there is much to be learnt for the flock owner
5 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
Dealing with bullying behaviours in chickens
We love the idyllic idea of flocks of free ranging chickens, who live peacefully amongst each other and with us. What happens when this is not possible due to legal housing restrictions for poultry or practical reasons due to predators? Your chickens might start to bully each other. Fiona and Hugh Osborne look at the options to deal with bullying.
8 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
Healthy Bees are Happy Bees - looking after the youngsters in 2026
Claire Waring takes a look at diseases affecting honey bee brood
6 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
The importance of power tools on the smallholding
Agricultural journalist and smallholder Jane Brooks joins us for her regular look at the world
4 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
Making new year resolutions for your flock
Paul Donovan kicks off 2026 with a wish list that provides positive experiences for your poultry
8 mins
January 2026
The Country Smallholder
How to Protect Your Flock as Bird Flu Housing Order Kicks In
Clare Taylor looks at practical biosecurity that can be part of your routine care
2 mins
January 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

