Caerphilly · Swarm collection

Bee swarm in Bedwas? Help is a minute away.

Bedwas is a village on the eastern fringe of the Caerphilly basin, just north of the town, where the Rhymney River forms a sweeping meander and the valley sides carry mature sycamore woodland and hawthorn-hedged farmland. The former Bedwas Navigation Colliery site to the south-east has been progressively reclaimed and now supports rough grassland, bramble scrub and developing woodland edge — a diverse forage habitat within easy flight of the village. White clover on the allotments and open recreation ground, ivy on older stone walls, and the valley-floor willows and alder complete a reliable seasonal sequence. The Cardiff, Vale and Valleys BKA covers Bedwas.

Postcodes we cover
CF83
Where swarms appear in Bedwas

Typical swarm locations

Collectors handle swarms in the gardens and hedgerow trees of the older village properties near the church, on the reclaimed colliery margin and scrub edge to the south-east, along the Rhymney riverside willows, and in the outbuildings and roof spaces of the semi-rural properties on the lanes towards Trethomas and Machen.

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Beekeeping associations near Bedwas

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

  • Cardiff, Vale and Valleys Beekeepers

    CF5 6LW· approx. 16 km

  • Gwent Beekeepers

    NP7 9DY· approx. 25 km

    Visit website
  • Bridgend Beekeepers

    CF32 8UU· approx. 28 km

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

Forage in Caerphilly

Sycamore is the defining tree across these valleys, blanketing every south-facing slope and delivering a generous May flow almost regardless of colony location. Hawthorn on valley-side hedge lines and blackthorn in scrub above the terraces follows through late spring. White clover persists on allotment gardens, valley-floor parks and the gentler upland grazings from June onward. Bramble is dense on reclaimed colliery tips, forest margins and Sirhowy and Ebbw valley sides; bilberry and ling heather on the Gelligaer, Mynydd Islwyn and Mynydd Llangynidr plateaux provide a useful late-August supplement for hives on the valley rim. Alder and willow along the Rhymney, Sirhowy and Ebbw corridors contribute early pollen; meadowsweet and purple loosestrife on wetter valley-floor ground extend the late-summer flow. Ivy on old stone chapel walls and valley-side garden walls closes the year.

More on beekeeping in Caerphilly
Nearby towns

Swarm help in neighbouring towns

Seen a swarm in Bedwas?

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