England · Swarm collection

Bee swarm collection in Hertfordshire

Hertfordshire is a greenbelt county of chalk, clay and well-hedged pasture — a landscape of market towns and commuter villages where honey bees thrive. Its beekeeping network is long-established and swarm collection is reliably fast.

Forage & honey flows

The chalk uplands of the north — around Baldock, Royston and Letchworth — give oilseed rape, sainfoin and a solid hawthorn flow. The southern clay country leans on sycamore, horse chestnut and field maple, with the limes of Hertford, Harpenden and St Albans producing a classic June crop. Ashridge, Tring Park and the Chilterns edge add beech forage. Bramble on the commons and rosebay willowherb along the Lee Valley corridor carry midsummer. Ivy closes a long, productive year.

Beekeeping character

Hertfordshire Beekeepers' Association has divisions in St Albans, Welwyn-Hatfield, Hitchin, Hertford, Barnet and Rickmansworth. Collectors here are seasoned at tight suburban gardens, listed-building chimneys and the boundary hedges of new estates pushing into greenbelt land.

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Beekeeping associations near Hertfordshire

Nearest BBKA-affiliated associations that support swarm collection in this area.

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

Seen a swarm in Hertfordshire?

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