Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)
Bees: it’s swarming season
IT’S official – swarming season for honeybees in South Africa has begun.
Halfway into spring is typically when bees reproduce and also buzz around looking for new places to call home and build beehives.
Shane Duthie, a beekeeper and founder of Bee Kulture, says bees – like most animals – will not attack or sting unless they feel threatened.
Duthie does not recommend avoiding bees unless one is allergic to them.
“If one encounters a lone bee, it is probably just looking for food and water and one should allow it on its way,” said Duthie. “A lone bee hardly poses a fatal threat to anyone and is unlikely to sting someone who is calm and does not swat at or disturb it.”
Bee colonies, on the other hand, can be identified by a large swarm settling to form a clump, often near a water meter, irrigation meter, pool pump, air vent or roof tiles, where they intend to move in.
Duthie explained this was a swarm that had just split from an established colony to set up a new colony.
These swarms are quite weak at times due to travel and are less aggressive than an established colony.
Duthie advised that if one encountered an established colony (mostly in trees and out in nature) it was best that they be left alone. Established colonies are more aggressive, especially when they have a lot of honey to protect.
Bees communicate with each other by releasing a substance that influences the entire swarm’s behaviour, so if they feel threatened, they will call for “back-up”. This will lead to all of the bees coming out of the colony to attack the threat.
Duthie shared these safety tips:
• Don’t stand in or disrupt the bees’ flight path as this will be seen as a threat.
• When the swarm does need to be removed, please contact a registered and reputable beekeeper to remove and rehome the colony.
• Don’t gas, fumigate, burn or cement the beehive.
Duthie said bee removals done by reputable beekeeping organisations were usually done at night, because all the bees are home then, and they are a lot less aggressive in lower temperatures.
“The bees will be vacuumed into a bee vac which is a safe chamber between the vacuum and the pipe. The brood (eggs), honey and comb will be cut and placed into frames of a brood box (beehive) before the bees are then put into their new beehive and transferred to an apiary (bee farm) where they can live, repopulate and prosper,” said Duthie.