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Beverley Beekeepers' Association

The local Beekeeping Association for East Yorkshire

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Artificial Swarm



It is quite possible, if your apiary is far from public gaze and you are always present, to allow your bees to swarm, catch the swarm, rehouse it in a new hive, and collect your honey harvest over the remainder of the year. However this is not an option for most of us. We need to carry out an artificial swarm.
Most books describe the method, the first step being to find the queen. The method below allows for those who find it difficult to do this. A good warm day is required.


You will need a floor, brood box, crown board, roof, and set of deep frames (preferably with drawn comb, but otherwise foundation).


As soon as you find eggs or larvae in queen cells you must do the following
1. Take the brood frames out of the box one by one
2. Brush or shake the bees off each comb back into the brood box.
3. Put the cleared combs into your new brood box. Keep them in the same order as before.
4. Select one with brood but no queen cells and return this to the original box
5. Fill this (original) box with new combs with the one brood comb in the middle of the box
6. Put on the queen excluder
7. Replace the supers
8. Examine the cleared combs in the new brood box. This should also contain some food combs. Any sealed queen cells should be cut off. If you have been checking regularly all queen cells should be unsealed
9. Place this new brood box on top of the supers
10. The nurse bees will ascend through the supers to repopulate the combs in the top box. The queen will be in the bottom box below the queen excluder
11. Next day take off the top brood box, place it on a floor, and add a crown board and roof. Position it 2 to 3 feet to one side of its original colony
12. You are now at the first stage of an artificial swarm as described in many bee books. If all the queen cells were unsealed the hives can remain in those relative positions for 6 to 7 days.
13. After 6 to 7 days move the single brood box colony elsewhere in the apiary, or just the other side of the parent stock. The effect will be to divert recently emerged flying bees which have orientated to this box back into the parent stock. With no flying bees the chance of after swarms from the single box is virtually nil.


If you do manage to find the queen then you start at (12) simply placing the queen, one frame of brood (without queen cells) and ten frames of drawn comb or foundation in a new brood box on the original site of the colony. All the other frames with adhering bees plus one new one to make up the number are left in the original box and placed 2 to 3 feet to the side of the new box.