Medway · Swarm collection

Bee swarm in Chatham? Help is a minute away.

Chatham is the largest of the historic Medway towns, its maritime heritage centred on the Chatham Historic Dockyard where Nelson's Victory was built. The dockyard ropewalk and the Victorian Commissioner's Garden give sheltered forage; the Medway riverside scrub below Fort Amherst and the Brompton Lines carry hawthorn and bramble; and the Great Lines Heritage Park on the hillfort ridge above the town gives a productive meadow and scrub habitat overlooking the whole Medway estuary.

Postcodes we cover
ME4ME5
Where swarms appear in Chatham

Typical swarm locations

Collectors attend swarms in the Chatham Historic Dockyard timber store and Commissioner's Garden borders, on the Victorian terrace eaves and chimney pots of Best Street and Military Road, in the Great Lines Heritage Park meadow scrub and hawthorn, and in the Medway riverside elder and bramble scrub between Chatham Waterfront and Fort Amherst.

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Beekeeping associations near Chatham

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 Medway

The Medway valley fruit-growing tradition — the western part of the old Garden of England — gives apiaries south of Rochester access to extensive cherry, apple, pear and plum orchards in the Burham, Halling and Snodland areas, with a concentrated late-April to mid-May blossom flow. Oilseed rape is grown on the Hoo Peninsula plateau and the river-plain fields north of Cliffe, giving a strong April flow visible from the A228. Hawthorn is dense on the North Downs scarp hedgerows above Walderslade, Blue Bell Hill and Cuxton; the chalk downland between the Medway crossing and Bluewater carries dense blackthorn, hawthorn and field scabious. The Hoo Peninsula marshes at Cliffe Pools, Northward Hill and Cliffe Creek carry sea lavender, sea purslane and coastal meadow wildflowers through July and August — a distinctive estuarine forage note. Lime trees line the Victorian residential streets of Rochester, Chatham and Gillingham; bramble and elder are prolific on the old dockyard margins and the Medway riverside scrub. Ivy on the Rochester castle walls and the older city fabric closes the year in October.

More on beekeeping in Medway
Nearby towns

Swarm help in neighbouring towns

Seen a swarm in Chatham?

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