Interesting weekend in the backyard. We had our first warm spring day on Saturday and the temperature shot up to 20 degrees Celsius – lovely! All of a sudden the backyard was a swirling sea of bees. The air was think with bees for about an hour and then the wild swarm settled in a large ball on the jasmine vine on our back fence. This is the second wild swarm that we have attracted to our backyard in the last two years. The sound of a swarm of bees is flight is truly deafening, more like the roar of jet engines than a gentle hum – amazing!
I called a ‘Swarm Collection’ beekeeper from the Southside Beekeepers and she arrived very quickly to start collecting the bees. Now I wish I had taken photos of this process but it was too exciting to even think about tearing my eyeballs away for a moment. I even suited up myself to help (I held the cardboard box)!
Essentially the beekeeper used a large soft brush called a ‘Bee Brush’ to sweep the bees off the vine and into a large cardboard box. Once the bees were in the box they were gently transfered to a hive box (see photo). We actually saw the Queen Bee slide into the hive and once she was installed any bees still in flight started to move towards the hive box. The bees that had settled on the pale-pink-sheet we had laid on the ground under the swarm all turned around and formed neat cues to crawl up the sheet into the hive door – strangest thing I’ve ever seen.
By dusk on Sunday all the bees had settled in the hive. The beekeeper then taped the box closed after giving the bees two hive frames of honey (food and water). The bees were then on their way to a new permanent home with a backyard vegie grower only a few suburbs away from me.

That sounds like an exciting day. I have always felt like it would be the complete vegetable garden if you kept bees and enjoyed delicious honey. Friends of mine are starting beekeeping and it is something I have promised myself that I will do once I get moved into a more suitable, permanent home.
Bees are a great addition to any vegetable garden as they help our fruit and vegetables to pollinate. It is a great idea to add flowers into our gardens to attract bees and predators into our garden. This always reduces the aphids that attack our plants.
Bio-diversity in our gardens is to be encouraged.
Love the blog. Great content.
Best wishes
Peter
Thanks Peter, nice to hear from you. Certainly my vegetable garden and fruit trees have been more productive since I started my hive two years ago. Until then lots of pollination failure. I find it a great ‘nod from nature’ that my garden is now acting as an invertebrate and bird magnet
Look forward to hearing that you have started keeping bees yourself.