Lures and Traps For Catching Bees

I have about 3 months to get my swarm traps in place, all good into.

The easiest way is to contact your local exterminator and tell him you are looking for a swarm. People usually contact the exterminator first when there is a swarm on their property. Most exterminators will gladly help responsible hobbyists.

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So true, but in my area and others the exterminator are training there technicians that treat to kill bugs how to traps and save honey bees.

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What a fantastic idea!!! Wow, such ingenious folks in this forum.

An old brood comb is a good attractant, add a few foundation less frames with just a starter strip and dose top bars and entrance with lemongrass oil. You need a volume of about 40 litres, a solid floor and a small entrance. Put the box up in a tree. Best of luck

This is a mixture I found on the net-have not tried it yet so I don’t know if it works or not.

Mixed 1/4 cup olive oil, a wad of beeswax (1/2 of a sheet of foundation), and about 20 drops of lemongrass oil. I heated the mixture together in a glass measuring cup that I placed in a pan of boiling water. Once it was all melted together, I poured it into a small foil bread mold we had in the cabinet. It solidified into a smearable paste in about 5 minutes.

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Hi Jake, after much thought & consideration, this is what I think. You need to think like a scout bee looking for a suitable home for her swarm. Your lure has to compete with all the other suitable hive sites. #1. the site must have good internal dimensions with room for the colony to grow into. #2 It must provide adequate shelter from the elements & #3 it must provide good protection from predators like bears & honey badgers. I’m thinking a tall square box with a vertical slit down low & mounted fairly high. Use lemongrass oil & bee pheromones, wax, whatever it takes to trick the bees into thinking it was previously occupied by bees. Good luck with that. cheers

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Hi Rod, your nuk box sounds ok for a small swarm, but if you want to catch a big swarm, you should think about a bigger box, like fishing, if you want big fish, use big bait.

Agree Jeff, a Nuc is not such a great idea, will be using a full size box.

I’m getting my gear ready for all the splits I’m going to do, which starts pretty early up here. I generally start checking mine late July, brass monkey month & I’m exercising swarm control.

Ideal size opening is 15cm² approx 1 3/4" diameter, and 8-12’ off the ground

I thought that it would be worth mentioning here that placing drawn out frames of comb into bait hives is illegal in Australia according to the Australian Apiary code of practice. Reason being it promotes robbing and the spread of disease.

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If there’s nothing in them there would be no reason for bees to rob surely. The idea is to put in old brood comb with NO stores whatsoever.

Empty brood comb is fine for bait hives in Australia… so long as it did not come from a diseased hive e.g. AFB

Hi Rodderick,

Actually, he is correct - new laws coming in (currently in Draft, Victoria voted yes, not sure on other states) which will cover all states in Australia - Foundation only, no comb!:

6.3 A swarm catch box must only contain foundation (not honey or honeycomb) and must be clearly and legibly marked with the beekeeper’s allocated hive identification code.

Cheers,

William Rogers
The Bunyip Beekeeper

But do you have enough bee comb Police to enforce this dreadful malpractice

Hello All,

My Flow Hive will arrive in the UK prior to spring 2016.

I want to lure a swarm to move in as early as possible.

Has anyone had any success with a product from Thornes called “Bee Charm”.

It smells like lemmon grass and recommends to lightly spray 30 cm away from the hive walls and frames. Repeat every eight days. It says it contains Listea Cubeba oil.

Any useful advice greatly appreciated.

Regards,

Simon

Thanks Dexter do you know anyone in the UK that can supply a Langstrough nuc? As a back up plan