Scotland · Swarm collection

Bee swarm collection in Midlothian

Midlothian is the council area immediately south of Edinburgh, a former coal-mining district now predominantly residential and agricultural, running from the North Esk gorge woodlands at Roslin and Lasswade through the Esk valley market towns of Dalkeith and Bonnyrigg to the moorland edge of the Moorfoot Hills above Gorebridge and Pathhead. The North and South Esk rivers provide the structural backbone of the beekeeping landscape, their valley woodlands sheltering some of the finest wild forage in the Lothians, while the arable plain above carries strong oilseed rape and white clover flows.

Forage & honey flows

Oilseed rape on the Midlothian arable plain between Dalkeith, Pathhead and the East Lothian boundary provides a powerful April-May flow that is one of the most reliable in the Lothians. White clover on the improved pastures of the Esk valley floor and the amenity grasslands of the Midlothian towns is the main mid-summer crop from June through July. Sycamore is the dominant May flow tree throughout the council area, with the best sources in the North Esk gorge woodlands at Roslin Glen and Lasswade. Hawthorn on the valley hedgerows and the Midlothian lane margins provides a complementary May blossom flow. Himalayan balsam is establishing in the lower Esk corridors near Dalkeith. Bramble is dense on former colliery and mining reclamation sites throughout the area. The Pentland Hills above Penicuik and the Moorfoot Hills above Gorebridge carry heather and bilberry from late July — modest but accessible upland heather ground within the council area. Ivy closes the foraging year on Dalkeith Palace estate walls and the older stone buildings of the Esk valley villages in October.

Beekeeping character

Edinburgh & Midlothian Beekeepers' Association serves the council area and is one of the larger district associations in Scotland, affiliated to the Scottish Beekeepers' Association. The association uses the Dalkeith area as a hub, and the Roslin Glen and North Esk gorge woodlands are well-known local forage landmarks. The OSR flow on the Midlothian plain requires timely extraction to prevent granulation, mirroring the pattern in East Lothian to the east.

Seen a swarm in Midlothian?

Report it in under a minute and a trained local beekeeper will arrange safe collection.