England · Swarm collection

Bee swarm collection in North Somerset

North Somerset stretches from the Bristol fringe at Long Ashton and Pill south through the Victorian seaside resort of Clevedon to the wide sandy bay at Weston-super-Mare, and inland across the Congresbury Yeo and Blind Yeo rhyne networks to the Mendip scarp at Churchill and Banwell. The area divides ecologically into three zones: the Severn estuary coastal fringe with its limestone cliffs and sea-facing gardens; the low-lying rhyne and moor farmland of the North Somerset Levels; and the Mendip foothills where limestone pasture, hawthorn hedgerows and ancient orchards give bees a long flowering season.

Forage & honey flows

Oilseed rape is grown extensively on the North Somerset Levels plain between Weston, Yatton and Congresbury, producing a strong April to May flow that fills supers quickly and requires timely extraction. Hawthorn is dense on the Mendip foothills hedgerows around Churchill, Winscombe and Banwell, and the Tickenham Ridge and Kewstoke Hill carry blackthorn and gorse for the earliest spring forage. Lime trees line the Victorian esplanade gardens of Weston-super-Mare and the older residential streets of Clevedon and Portishead, giving a reliable June town-centre flow. The orchard gardens of Long Ashton, Backwell and Nailsea carry traditional apple, pear and plum blossom in May. Bramble is prolific on the Mendip scarp scrub and on the regenerating scrub of old rhyne banks; white clover on the improved moor grassland and rhyne margins carries through July. Sea-buckthorn and coastal grassland at Sand Bay, Weston Sands and Clevedon Marine Lake provide a late-summer coastal supplement. Ivy on old limestone walls and the cliff-face gardens at Clevedon and Portishead closes the forage year in October.

Beekeeping character

Weston Super Mare Beekeepers' Association and North Somerset Beekeepers both serve the area and are affiliated to Avon Beekeepers. The Avon BKA network covers the whole Bristol and North Somerset region, with training apiaries and a strong swarm collection roster. Collectors here handle the full range: Victorian esplanade eaves in Weston, clifftop garden walls in Clevedon, orchard outbuildings in Nailsea and farmyard roofs on the low moor.

Seen a swarm in North Somerset?

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