England · Swarm collection

Bee swarm collection in Merseyside

Merseyside combines coastal dune systems, city parks and post-industrial brownfield — an unusual bee landscape anchored by the Liverpool, Sefton and Wirral green belt.

Forage & honey flows

The Sefton Coast sand dunes contribute an unusual assortment of forage — sea holly, restharrow, viper's bugloss, wild thyme — feeding urban bees along the coast. Horse chestnut and sycamore in Sefton Park, Calderstones and Birkenhead Park give the early flow; the lime avenues of south Liverpool and Wallasey carry the main June flow. Bramble blankets the Mersey Forest plantings; rosebay willowherb flushes Everton and Kirkby brownfield. A late coastal sea-buckthorn crop at Formby and Crosby is a known supplementary flow before the ivy closes the year.

Beekeeping character

Liverpool & District and Wirral Beekeepers' branches between them cover Merseyside; collectors have decades of experience with tight terrace gardens, dockside warehouse conversions and dune-fringe cottages.

Towns in Merseyside

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We prioritise coverage county-wide. Towns with a dedicated page below; more town pages rolling out soon.

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Beekeeping associations near Merseyside

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

  • Wirral Beekeepers

    CH62 7HW· approx. 10 km

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  • Liverpool & District Beekeepers

    L25 7TE· approx. 10 km

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  • Southport & District Beekeepers Beekeepers

    L37 7BS· approx. 18 km

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  • Ormskirk & Croston Beekeepers

    WA11 8RG· approx. 20 km

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  • North Cheshire Beekeepers

    WA6 7QN· approx. 23 km

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  • Flint and District Beekeepers

    CH7 6BQ· approx. 24 km

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

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