Neath Port Talbot · Swarm collection

Bee swarm in Port Talbot? Help is a minute away.

Port Talbot is the coastal industrial town of Neath Port Talbot, dominated by the Tata Steel steelworks on the seafront and sheltered to the east by the Margam upland massif. Away from the industrial core, the town has more forage than its reputation suggests: Margam Country Park — a Grade I listed parkland with mature oak, chestnut and lime — lies immediately to the south-east, providing a superb July lime flow and extensive ornamental grounds; the Afan Valley footprint to the north-east brings sycamore woodland and bramble scrub within range. The coastal dune system at Kenfig to the south supports marram grass and sea buckthorn. The West Glamorgan BKA covers Port Talbot.

Postcodes we cover
SA13
Where swarms appear in Port Talbot

Typical swarm locations

Collectors attend swarms in the residential streets of Sandfields, Aberavon and Taibach, in the mature woodland and parkland of Margam Country Park, along the Afan Way corridor scrub north of the town, in the garden plots and allotments on the hillside estates above Cwmavon, and in the eave voids and chimneys of the older terrace streets near the town centre.

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Beekeeping associations near Port Talbot

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

  • Bridgend Beekeepers

    CF32 8UU· approx. 15 km

  • West Glamorgan Beekeepers

    SA4 9DH· approx. 16 km

  • Swansea and District Beekeepers

    SA4 4PE· approx. 20 km

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

Forage in Neath Port Talbot

Sycamore dominates the valley sides throughout the borough, delivering a generous May flow in every settled community from Briton Ferry to Glynneath. Hawthorn and blackthorn on the valley-side hedgerows and upland field margins follow through late April and May. White clover is abundant on valley-floor parks, sports grounds and the coastal amenity grassland around Swansea Bay; bramble is exceptionally heavy on reclaimed colliery and industrial land throughout the valley floors. The lime avenues of Margam Country Park provide a distinctive July flow; Margam's veteran chestnut and oak supplement through spring. Bilberry and ling heather on the Mynydd y Gwair and the upper Dulais and Neath Valley plateaux offer a late-summer supplement for colonies on the valley rim. Alder and willow along the Nedd, Dulais and Afan corridors contribute early pollen; the Kenfig sand dune system brings sea buckthorn and dune-slack flora within reach of coastal apiaries.

More on beekeeping in Neath Port Talbot
Nearby towns

Swarm help in neighbouring towns

Seen a swarm in Port Talbot?

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