I finally got all my swarm pictures ready. I've included pictures from 3 different ones. The first was about 20 feet up a tree, where most of ours wind up. We have to use the bucket on the tractor to reach them.
I lift my husband up in the bucket with snippers for small branches, lobbers for bigger ones, a hand saw and a 5 gallon bucket.
He carefully removes any limbs sticking out of the swarm because one swarm might cover several. You don't want to have long limbs sticking out that might hang on other ones, that could accidentally dislodge them. And nobody would be a happy camper then.
Retreiving a swarm is not usually easy and can be dangerous. Getting stung is the least of your worries. Always have the right equipment before you start and know the risks if it is high off the ground.
When they land in a tree, ideally you would be able to cut the limb they are on and gently lower it into a bucket or the hive box. It won't always work that way. If they get bumped, most of them will fall to the ground in a big clump, now they're all ticked off and will fly around in a large cloud for a few minutes. Eventually they will all settle back around the queen, whether she's still in her original spot or she fell to the ground too.
This is a swarm trap that we tried this year for the first time. We placed queen pheromone inside and they literally made a 'bee line' for the trap. The back end comes off for easy removal.
We have seen many of these traps in Tucson, Arizona. They are used for the Africanized Honey Bees that inhabit the area.
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