Catching and Hiving Swarms

A new colony for free

Bait hives, Collecting swarms, hiving swarms
Basic Assessment: how to take a honeybee swarm and hive it

I once entered a fishing competition. I had fancy baits, and my catch was dismal. A chap on the other side of the pond used soggy lumps of white bread and had a terrific haul. So when catching things, it pays to give them what they want.

A large swarm of bees clustered on a tree

A large swarm *

Bait hives

This page is about catching swarms. Bait hives are dummy/lure hives that you put out to catch / lure swarms. Once the swarm has taken up residence, it has to be moved into one of your hives (hiving it). Every so often, a member of the public reports a swarm, so if you can arrive before it moves on, you can have a colony for free.

Swarms move in three ways

  1. Those that take up resident in a spare box in your apiary are your casts (after-swarms), feral bees, or from another beekeeper.

  2. After a swarm leaves one of your hives, it bivouacs close to your apiary.

  3. A swarm bivouacs far, far away from its home apiary.

A beekeeper no longer has ownership once a swarm has left their apiary; it’s free for the taking.

A well-sited bait hive, not too distant from your neighbours, may catch a swarm every year. A good volume is a deep Langstroth or National brood box. It must be positioned in the shade or dappled sunlight and emulate a feral nesting site by having the entrance facing south, low in the hive body, preferably with a cross-section of around 15 square centimetres. An old comb or some propolis placed inside makes them assume it is a suitable home. Alternatively, attract them with a Nasonov swarm lure (bought) or lemongrass. Using a frame of old comb in addition to a Nasonov lure brings no additional benefit.

Bees prefer to nest out of the reach of bears, so it is best to build a platform in a tree 3–4 meters up. This is a dangerous undertaking, so putting a hive on a flat roof is a sensible compromise. It is handy to prevent them from building wild comb by putting frames inside the bait hive. If you don’t do this, or fail to remove the bees in a timely fashion, they build comb attached to the roof. Manage this by cutting it out and tying it into empty frames supported by string or elastic bands.

Collecting swarms

swarm with a box over it

Homing and Hiving

Homing

If necessary, place an upturned box beside the pile of bees, with one side elevated by a twig so that they crawl in.

Have a cup of tea. Then you have two options. Return in the evening when all the bees are in the box, or grab and run and expect some lost souls to fly around the site for a few days. To contain the bees, lift the sheet's sides and tie them together with string. On the journey home, check they do not fan loudly, as this signifies that they are overheating; if they do, use a water sprayer.

bees crawling up a ramp and into the hive

Hiving Options

  • If you can catch a queen and mark her and the weather is warm, it is fun to shake the bees on a ramp covered with a sheet. The bees will innately walk up to the entrance. Once they are in the hive, open it and insert a queen excluder (QE) above the floor.

  • To save yourself some hassle, insert the QE in first and shake them straight into the hive/nuc using an empty brood box as a funnel, like a shook swarm. The problem with using a box like this is that many bees cling to the walls and climb up rather than down. A rim of duct tape sprayed with water stops this.

  • Some people shake the bees into an empty brood box (called an eke in this situation). Once they stay inside, place the new brood box plus empty frames on top. After 10 minutes, the bees will have moved up to the brood box, and the eke can be removed.

Queen excluder

  • If you caught the swarm within 3 km of your apiary, put a QE above the floor so they do not abscond to that lovely home the scouts found. I recommend you leave the QE in place until they have at least one frame of brood. . Bees don’t like empty boxes they haven’t chosen. Some brave beekers say leave the QE in for 24 hours. I’ve tried it three times, and all the bees eloped — a finding that must be approaching statistical significance.

  • Some fear leaving a queen excluder under the brood box will strip pollen off the bees’ legs. The stripping is incomplete. If necessary, they increase their foraging, so it’s not a problem in the short term.

  • The queen usually starts to lay within 48 hours, but occasionally takes longer.

  • If the swarm's departure was delayed beyond eight days, the virgin(s) may have killed the old queen. So, as a compromise, if there are no eggs after several days, remove the QE so that a virgin can go to mate.

  • Rarely, a swarm does not contain a queen.

  • A newly mated queen may take up to 5 weeks to start laying. Wait a fortnight. If you’ve run out of patience, reassure yourself using a test frame.

Casts

  • If there are several little lumps of bees in a tree or bush, these are probably secondary swarms headed by virgins. They can be shaken into a single box, and the queens left to fight. If a swarm taken has taken up residence somewhere and the comb does not contain eggs, the queen may be going out to mate, so if you move her colony, she will get lost.

Feed

  • If there is no honey flow, after 1–2 days, give a substantial swarm 4 kg of sugar as syrup. Use a thin strength to emulate nectar. But they don’t need stimulation, and bees dilute honey to 50% for personal consumption, so a mixture more concentrated than thin won’t hurt them. Swarms draw comb rapidly; most of a box in one week.

Quarantine

  • If you can, quarantine the swarm for several weeks until you are sure it is disease-free.

Varroa

  • A swarm flies off with 35% of the mites from the home colony. So, immediately (within 9 days) treat a swarm with oxalic acid. Alternatively, use a frame of unsealed brood. Once the brood in this comb is sealed, it will be full of varroa. Freeze it overnight and return it to the hive.

Next, prevent swarms (so you don’t have to catch them). Abridged version.

Page 5.