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  • 04/06/2025
Kristin Hawthorne visited a local apiary in Aylesford to have a go at beekeeping and learn more about Kent's honey bees. She also finds out how the invasive Yellow-legged Hornet threatens their survival and what you can do to stop it.

Presenter Abby Hook also speaks to Ian Campbell from the British Beekeeping Association.

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Transcript
00:00Now, as a local apiary in Aylesford prepares for its first summer offering hands-on beekeeping experiences,
00:07our reporter Kristen Hawthorne went along to suit up and learn more about our county's honeybees.
00:12She also found out about a growing threat to our native pollinators, the invasive yellow-legged Asian hornet,
00:19and what we can all do to help protect the hive.
00:23How much do you know about the honeybee?
00:25Personally, I thought I knew a lot, but it turns out there's much more to the insect than I'd previously thought.
00:30This is just one sheet of honey, and it weighs about three pounds. It's quite heavy.
00:34The bees here, they are flying all around, but this is just a little bit of the honey that they produce every single day.
00:41But beyond the honey and the beeswax, the threat of yellow-legged hornets is a serious issue,
00:46as they can wipe out entire hives of our native honeybees.
00:50What they will do, they will hawk a colony of honeybees.
00:53So once they've found a colony, they will fly around in front of it, catching the honeybees as they come back to their...
00:59because obviously the honeybees are bringing stores and that, they will catch a honeybee on the wing.
01:04The wing muscles are the protein that they need to feed to their larvae.
01:07They don't eat the bees.
01:09They just need the protein to feed to their larvae that then grow into adult hornets.
01:15If you see in your loft, your shed, a little embryo nest, which is like a golf ball paper mache inside the...
01:23in your eaves of your roof and things like that, just have a good look at it.
01:26You know, that could be an Asian hornet queen, it could be a European hornet queen.
01:30If you see one, snap it and report it on the Asian Hornet Watch app.
01:34This is an Asian hornet and it's been newly named as the yellow-legged hornet.
01:37Each one of these can consume almost 13 kilograms of insects in its lifetime,
01:42whether that be wasps, honeybees or anything else.
01:45In comparison to European hornets, the yellow-legged hornets are slightly smaller and a lot darker in colour.
01:51So if you're looking out for them, those are the things to look for.
01:53In a yearly life cycle, a nest of Asian hornets can consume 12 and a half kilos of insects.
01:59That's honeybees, flies, butterflies, spiders, anything.
02:04So you imagine that, the weight of 12 bags of sugar in weight of insects per nest, per year.
02:12And yeah, they just decimate all the local, you know, insect life.
02:16So this trap is designed to allow anything back out that isn't an Asian hornet,
02:21like your wasps and your flies and stuff like that.
02:24The more queens we catch now, the less nests that are produced.
02:28But it's not just hornets causing problems,
02:30as habitat loss has forced some honeybees to build hives inside homes.
02:35Jason has been doing hive removals for four years now,
02:38but with honeybees losing more and more of their natural habitat,
02:41it's not surprising that 2025 has been a particularly busy year.
02:45So by becoming educated, planting things like lavender and thyme in your garden,
02:50and by trapping or reporting yellow-legged hornet sightings,
02:53we can slowly but surely help the bees live a little easier.
02:57Kristen Hawthorne for KMTV in Ealesford.
03:05Well, joining me on the line now is Ian Campbell from the British Beekeeping Association.
03:10Watching all those bees fly around makes me all itch and twitchy.
03:13But Ian, explain to us why they're just so important.
03:18The key thing with honeybees is pollination.
03:21They are fantastic pollinators.
03:23They live in large colonies.
03:25In the UK, most beekeepers are small hobby beekeepers,
03:29so we don't kind of move our bees around.
03:31Other species do a lot of pollination as well,
03:34but it's that pollination that's the real critical thing for your food security.
03:39And if you like things like coffee and chocolate and things like that,
03:43you need honeybees as well as a huge range of other crops.
03:47Yeah, and Kristen spoke about it in her piece there about the yellow-legged hornet.
03:50And just how worried should we be about the threat to honeybees?
03:55Is it getting worse?
03:56Does it change into the summer months?
03:57It certainly has.
04:00We've had yellow-legged hornets coming into the UK since 2016.
04:05And until 2023, it was at relatively low levels,
04:09and the problem was being managed by the National Bee Unit very effectively.
04:13In 2022, there was a huge surge year in France.
04:18In 2023, we picked up the consequences of that in England.
04:21And going from a handful of sightings, we went to 72 nests found in 2023.
04:28That number dropped down a little bit last year,
04:30largely because of the horrible, horrible spring and early summer we had.
04:34This year, the numbers we're seeing in the Channel Islands and places like that
04:38are at new record levels.
04:40And we're really worried that that's going to transfer to the UK.
04:44And Kent is right on the front line, unfortunately.
04:47Yeah, and the Garden of England, of course, too.
04:49Is that a particular concern?
04:52It will be.
04:53I mean, one of the impacts of yellow-legged hornets can be on fruit crops,
04:56on orchards, on pollination as it takes down the local biodiversity.
05:01So, yes, it can be a big concern to your area.
05:05And what can people do to not only, we heard in the report there,
05:08to take a picture of the Asian hornet if you see it and report it,
05:12but also taking it right back to the beginning,
05:13how can we promote honeybees in our area?
05:17How can we give them somewhere to make a home?
05:21I mean, with honeybees, they live in hives,
05:24and those hives are generally managed by beekeepers.
05:27There's a huge range.
05:29There's 270 species of bee in the UK.
05:32All of those need habitat, as you suggest, and they need forage.
05:37So, planting in your garden, however small,
05:39even if you've got a window box or a small patch of garden,
05:42just plant flowers, and that will make a really big difference.
05:47Can you take us through a few of the differences
05:49between the different types of bees that we have
05:52and honeybees and bumblebees?
05:54What are some of the key things that stick out?
05:56I imagine the list could go on and on,
05:57and I don't know if we have time for them all,
05:59but take us through some of those key things.
06:01So, when we're looking in our gardens,
06:03we know very quickly and clearly.
06:05We had a bit of an explanation there in that report,
06:07and we saw the different pictures of bees.
06:08But what are some of the different species that we'll see in Kent?
06:12So, there's one species of honeybee, Apis mellifera,
06:16and a lot of people confuse those with wasps
06:19because the shape and the size, people think, is very wasp-like,
06:22but it isn't that bright yellow colour that you see in wasps.
06:26What people often confuse is there are many species of bumblebees,
06:30about 24 species of bumblebee.
06:32Those live in small colonies, a couple of hundred bees.
06:35Those can be in your garden, those can be in the ground,
06:39and occasionally they're in buildings as well or outbuildings.
06:43Those will disappear by the end of the year.
06:45They're not really any issue to you.
06:47They don't often sting.
06:48And then there's all the solitary bees,
06:50which is well over 200 species,
06:52and they cover such a huge range and such a huge kind of diversity
06:56that, yeah, you're exactly right.
06:59We can't go through all those right now.
07:00I know you weren't there to obviously film that report with Kristen
07:04and see her beekeeping skills in action,
07:08but how do you think she did from just the videos you see?
07:11Have we got a beekeeper on our hands here at Kame TV?
07:13Absolutely.
07:14I mean, the main thing with working with bees is confidence,
07:18and you want to...
07:20Bees are sensitive to how you move.
07:23They don't like sudden movements.
07:25They don't like jerky movements.
07:26They don't like people waving their hands around.
07:28So if you're calm and just relaxed,
07:31and that's how sort of Kristen appeared, that's lovely.
07:36If you're just relaxed around the bees,
07:38they'll be fairly chilled around you.
07:39Yes, you did an excellent job, but we need her here reporting,
07:42so maybe in another life.
07:44Ian Cavill, thank you so much for your time today.

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