East Dunbartonshire · Swarm collection

Bee swarm in Strathblane? Help is a minute away.

Strathblane is a village in the broad valley where the Blane Water flows between the Campsie Fells to the east and the Strathblane Hills to the west, one of the most scenic beekeeping locations in the Glasgow hinterland. The village is at the northern end of the West Highland Way corridor from Milngavie, and the surrounding countryside retains a strongly rural character with mixed farmland, hedgerow hawthorn and river-valley ash. The Campsie scarp is visible immediately above the village; the heather moorland of Dumgoyne and the Strathblane Hills is accessible to colonies kept on the valley floor. The Blane Water carries alder and willow in a well-wooded corridor south through Blanefield to Milngavie.

Postcodes we cover
G63
Where swarms appear in Strathblane

Typical swarm locations

Collectors attend swarms on the Blane Water bankside alder and willow through the village, on the hawthorn hedgerows of the farmland between Strathblane and Killearn, on the gorse and heather of the lower Campsie and Strathblane Hills slopes above the valley, and in the garden trees and older farm buildings around the village centre on Campsie Road and Glasgow Road.

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Beekeeping associations near Strathblane

Nearest BBKA-affiliated associations to help with swarm collection and local advice.

  • Carlisle Beekeepers

    CA6 4HN· approx. 144 km

    Visit website
  • Cockermouth Beekeepers

    CA13 0AU· approx. 160 km

  • Whitehaven Beekeepers

    CA24 3HZ· approx. 171 km

    Visit website

Association data sourced from the British Beekeepers Association directory via SwarmBase.

Forage in East Dunbartonshire

Sycamore is the dominant May flow tree throughout East Dunbartonshire, lining the suburban streets, school grounds and railway corridors of Bearsden, Bishopbriggs and Kirkintilloch in large numbers. White clover on the amenity grasslands, golf courses and roadside verges of the residential areas is the main mid-summer crop from June through August. Hawthorn on the hedgerows of the Glazert and Blane valleys and on the field boundaries of the agricultural land between Torrance and Lennoxtown provides a sustained May blossom flow. The Campsie Fells above Lennoxtown carry bell heather and cross-leaved heath from late July through September — the most significant upland heather resource within reach of the Glasgow conurbation. Himalayan balsam is colonising the Kelvin and Glazert corridors strongly. Bramble on field margins and in urban green space edges provides a late-summer supplement from July into September. Lime trees in the older residential avenues of Bearsden and Milngavie give a distinctive late-June to early-July nectar flow. Ivy on stone walls and older buildings completes the calendar in October.

More on beekeeping in East Dunbartonshire
Nearby towns

Swarm help in neighbouring towns

Seen a swarm in Strathblane?

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