Keeping honey bee hives means you will likely encounter swarms. A natural reproduction process, swarming can happen to any beekeeper, so you should be prepared when it occurs. It is a sight to behold when the swarm is in full flight. The season of swarms is typically in April and May here in the Mid-Atlantic, when bees are building up quickly from all the available nectar.
Humming bees can be heard from about 100 feet away and they come out in a wave that bursts from the hive.
Extra Equipment On Hand
I have at least two hives, sometimes three, but an experienced beekeeper will always have additional hive boxes on hand when a swarm appears. This is your opportunity to increase your bee population free of charge! The problem is catching the swarm as it can be quite tricky.
Cost
Honey bee startup colonies are expensive to buy — roughly $150 a pop — so when a swarm emerges from a newly installed hive you see your honey harvest evaporate into thin air. The hive will decamp, taking at least a third of the population along with the queen and move elsewhere.
Close is Better
The swarm may move close enough to capture, but more likely than not, they fly far away to a tree 60 feet high with no chance of hiving them up for a new colony. The remaining bees are a much smaller population and have little chance of producing excess honey for harvest.
Capturing the Queen
Once I had a swarm land on a nearby tree and I simply climbed a ladder and lopped the branch off and brought it down the ladder with all the bees attached and knocked them into the hive box. The key is to get the queen into the hive box and all the workers will automatically follow. For once, the whole procedure of moving the swarm into the hive went like clock work!
Queen Cups
Before the swarm leaves the original hive, the queen lays eggs into queen cups, or larger cells that can accommodate the larger growing queen larvae. After the swarm leaves with the old queen, the new queens will emerge from the queen cups and if there are several that emerge, they will fight to the death, until the stronger one and usually the first one to emerge, is victorious.
Way Station Cluster
Queens are too heavy to fly long distances, so the swarm usually will form on a nearby structure or tree branch which scout bees have already scoped out beforehand. They cluster in the chosen spot for a few hours or a few days, until the scout bees determine where the final nest site will be.
5 Comments
What is a swarm trap ? My bees are in a tree out of my reach… I have set out a nuc with one frame of honey in it ??? On my deck , I have a birds eye view of them from my 2nd story deck , but can’t reach them, they have been there since Wednesday 2 full days now. Any suggestions ? I just put honey supers on that hive 3 weeks ago. What will happen about them ?.. comb was already drawn out.
A swarm trap is simply a plywood box with a cover and an entrance that is baited with old frames and lemon grass oil. Google it. If you have a nuc, put old frames (5) of brood comb, not honey, in it and either bait it with lemon grass oil or swarm commander to attract them. Your original hive should be making a new queen to take over the hive. You still have workers there but your honey harvest will be greatly diminished. Good luck!!
We had a swarm settle into the chimney of an unfinished house just two weeks ago; how can we go about getting them moved out and capturing them? Thanks!
Hello Mary,
There are a few different methods that may work depending on how established the bees are, the structure of the chimney, and accessibility.
It’s likely that your city or county has a bee club. We would suggest contacting them for a bee removal/swarm capture reference. This may be a good opportunity to earn experience as an apprentice.
Best of luck,
KBB Team
Tried to hive box two swarms of bees last year one group stayed almost a month second just a few days. What tricks are out there for better results.