North Lanarkshire · Swarm collection

Bee swarm in Wishaw? Help is a minute away.

Wishaw is a former mining and steel town southeast of Motherwell, on the Clydeside plateau above the South Calder Water, where Victorian and Edwardian residential streets surround a compact town centre that has been substantially rebuilt. The farmland edges to the east and south retain hawthorn hedgerows and sycamore on the lane margins; the South Calder Water carries elder and hawthorn scrub below the town. Calder Glen Country Park provides a sheltered wooded corridor with mature sycamore and mixed plantation woodland. White clover on the verges and amenity grassland is the main June flow; bramble is dense on the former mineral railway embankments threading east from the town toward Carluke.

Postcodes we cover
ML2
Where swarms appear in Wishaw

Typical swarm locations

Collectors attend swarms along the Calder Glen woodland paths and South Calder hawthorn margins, on the bramble-covered former mineral railway embankments east of the town, in the stone eave and loft voids of the older properties around King Street and Main Street, and in garden hedges and ornamental trees in the Victorian residential streets of Cambusnethan.

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Beekeeping associations near Wishaw

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

  • Carlisle Beekeepers

    CA6 4HN· approx. 110 km

    Visit website
  • Cockermouth Beekeepers

    CA13 0AU· approx. 129 km

  • Keswick Beekeepers

    CA12 4NT· approx. 140 km

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

Forage in North Lanarkshire

Sycamore is the dominant May flow tree across North Lanarkshire, most productive in the residential streets and country parks of the Clyde plain. White clover on the improved amenity grasslands and the agricultural fields of the Kelvin and Calder valleys peaks in June and July. The Forth and Clyde Canal corridor through Kilsyth carries himalayan balsam from late July; bramble is prolific on the former steelworks and colliery reclamation sites throughout Motherwell, Coatbridge and Bellshill. Drumpellier Country Park near Coatbridge and Strathclyde Country Park near Motherwell provide sheltered lime and hawthorn parkland forage. The Campsie Fells above Kilsyth carry heather and bilberry from late July into September — accessible heather ground for North Lanarkshire beekeepers willing to make a short journey up the hill. Gorse is dense on the moorland fringe above Kilsyth and Cumbernauld; ivy closes the calendar in October in the older town centres.

More on beekeeping in North Lanarkshire
Nearby towns

Swarm help in neighbouring towns

Seen a swarm in Wishaw?

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