Tees Valley · Swarm collection

Bee swarm in Skelton? Help is a minute away.

Skelton is a former ironstone-mining village on the eastern Cleveland Hills escarpment, its hillside terraces and the old village green of Skelton Green overlooking Skelton Beck below. Hawthorn hedgerows are dense on the agricultural lanes toward Boosbeck and Skelton Castle; the Cleveland Hills moorland — Commondale, Danby High Moor and Moorsholm edge — rises immediately to the south; and bramble covers the old ironstone tipping grounds and railway sidings that thread through the village margins.

Postcodes we cover
TS12
Where swarms appear in Skelton

Typical swarm locations

Collectors attend swarms on the hawthorn hedgebanks of the High Street field margins and the lanes toward Boosbeck and Stanghow, on the old stone garden walls of Skelton Green and Coniston Road, in the bramble and elder scrub on the old ironstone tipping grounds below the village, and in the Cleveland Hills margin gorse and heather scrub above Skelton Bank.

Powered by SwarmBase

Beekeeping associations near Skelton

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

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

Forage in Tees Valley

Oilseed rape on the flat arable plain between the Tees and the Cleveland escarpment produces a heavy April to May flow, particularly around Stokesley, Stillington and the fields east of Yarm. Hawthorn and blackthorn are thick in the suburban hedgerows of Stockton, Billingham and Guisborough. Lime trees line the Victorian residential streets of Middlesbrough, Hartlepool and Redcar and carry a reliable June flow. The defining feature of the landscape is the extent of ex-industrial grassland: former ICI works at Billingham and Wilton, steelworks sites at Redcar, and colliery reclamation ground throughout are dense with bramble, rosebay willowherb and white clover from June through August. Sea buckthorn and coastal meadow wildflowers on the North Tees marshes, Coatham Sands and Huntcliff provide a distinctive supplement near the shore. The Cleveland Hills rise sharply south of Guisborough, Skelton and Loftus and carry ling heather and bilberry from late July into September — within easy reach of apiaries on the urban fringe.

More on beekeeping in Tees Valley
Nearby towns

Swarm help in neighbouring towns

Seen a swarm in Skelton?

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