Blenheim Palace celebrates World Honey Bee Day - Fruit & Vine

Blenheim Palace celebrates World Honey Bee Day with woodland swarm success

Blenheim Palace celebrated World Honey Bee Day with the success of its project to introduce bee swarms to its nine new woodlands that were created as part of a groundbreaking legacy project. 

Blenheim Palace celebrated World Honey Bee Day with the success of its project to introduce bee swarms to its nine new woodlands.

Led by Filipe Salbany, bee conservationist and beekeeper at Blenheim Estate, the team had introduced oak logs to the new plantations in the hope of enticing bees to set up home, in the absence of mature trees with suitable cavities.  

The logs are intended to replicate the oaks in Blenheim’s ancient woodland which are home to over 100 colonies of wild bees. 

Mr Salbany and his team have discovered that all of the logs have been filled with bee swarms, a positive outcome of the ongoing initiative as there are no managed hives in the vicinity, therefore establishing the future ecotype bee for the Estate. 

Double whammy 

Blenheim Palace celebrated World Honey Bee Day with the success of its project to introduce bee swarms to its nine new woodlands.
Filipe Salbany, bee conservationist and beekeeper at Blenheim Estate.

Mr Salbany added: “It’s been a fantastic success. This is a very natural process, and we know the bees inhabiting the logs have not come from managed hives.  

“It’s a double whammy – not only are we using wood that might otherwise be left to rot or be burnt, but the lichens, moss and fungi on the logs carry spores which are going into the ground and helping to regenerate the soil.” 

Earlier this year, Blenheim Palace opened its Rowse Honey Hive, the latest initiative in its ongoing partnership with Rowse Honey, which aims to enhance and expand habitats for pollinators across the Estate, creating a natural environment where wildlife can not only survive, but thrive. 

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