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beginner beekeeping

There is a wealth of information about beekeeping on the Internet and in books: some of it is excellent, some is confusing, some of it is specific to a location. Beekeeping is a practical skill, best learned directly through the advice and support of experts who will help you to gain knowledge and confidence.

A beginner’s course will guide you through buying a suitable hive, protective clothing and essential items, and acquiring your first colony of honey bees. It will teach you how to keep your honey bees safe, healthy and calm. It will help you to avoid making discouraging mistakes that could be costly, and could be harmful to bees. Our beginners’ beekeeping course completes at the beginning of May.

Our 2025 Beginners’ Course

Our course takes a flexible approach, so we can accept enrolments up to April 2025. It consists of 12 pre-recorded sessions available online exclusively to our beginners so that they can choose their own quiet time to watch. We also schedule 12 live Zoom chats so that you can chat to our experts and ask questions about any beekeeping topic.

Most importantly, the course includes a hands-on day to meet in person for a spot of revision, some practical work and the essential visit to the bees (always a highlight!). You will also have the option to attend further practical sessions at our training apiary.

Each beginner receives a ring-binder packed with useful reference material and tips, and a few other bits and pieces to support their learning.

Our beginners find this flexible approach helpful because everyone has other commitments. We continue to support our beginners when they come to setting up their first apiary or acquiring their first colony.

What you will learn

The recorded sessions cover everything you need to know as a beginner. You will learn:

  • About hive styles and parts, and how they are used
  • What to consider when finding a good site for your hive
  • Communication within the colony, and why bees sting when all else fails
  • About the fascinating structure of the honey bee colony
  • Why bees swarm, and how we can handle it to the bees’ and our own benefit
  • How to keep your bees healthy
  • How to make sure that bees have access to good forage
  • How to inspect your bees safely and effectively
  • About beekeeping tasks throughout the year
  • How to harvest your first honey
  • How to pull your knowledge together and become a good beekeeper

How to enrol on our 2025 course

The cost for all this is just £110 per person; not increased since 2021.
If you would like to enrol on our 2025 course or have any queries, please email R&DBKA Secretary

We accept enrolments up to the end of April 2025. The practical day will be on Sunday 4th May 2025.

Please try to resist the temptation to buy any beekeeping equipment before you are well on your way through a beginner’s course. Beekeeping catalogues are full of marvellous gadgets, and there are several styles of hive to choose from. We are happy to advise, if you wish.

Not in our area?

To find beginners’ courses organised by other beekeeping associations within Hampshire, please go to the Hampshire Beekeepers’ Association website.

Most local beekeeping associations offer beginner training. If you are not in the Hampshire area, please go to the British Beekeepers’ Association website.

What do beekeepers do?

Not sure whether you would like to be a beekeeper? Read more about what it takes to be a beekeeper by CLICKING HERE.

A vast new world awaits you in the study of the bees themselves, their role in the environment and the working of the hive. Honey bees have evolved alongside flowering plants over millions of years, long before man walked the Earth. In learning about the flowers that honey bees visit, you will find the countryside takes on a new look.

Bees fulfill a vital function in the food chain by pollinating fruit and seed crops, and the honey they produce provides them – and us – with a nutritious food.

A successful beekeeper knows how to help the bees make the most of their environment, how to deal with issues such as bee health, whether the bees have enough stores, and when (or if) the bees have honey to spare.

The rewards are many and keep on coming but the downsides are –

  • you will get stung – bees are not naturally aggressive but stings are inevitable. For most people, this results in short-term discomfort but we need to be aware of the risks of stings, how to deal with them and how to avoid them
  • it is not a guaranteed income stream – equipment can be expensive and it takes time and patience to produce honey. Equipment bought is suppliers’ sales reduces costs. Second hand equipment MUST be thoroughly sterilised
  • one hive is often not enough – you will start with one hive but will probably find you want (at least) one more
  • bees need space – siting a hive in your garden can work if you have enough space and your neighbours are happy with the arrangement; consider an “out apiary” such as on farm land
  • bees need time – weekly checks are essential in spring and early summer when the bees’ activity peaks

Your local association is always pleased to give advice or practical help.

How to get started

We strongly advise that anyone wishing to keep bees attends a full beginners’ course that includes a practical session with the bees. You should delay buying equipment and ordering or acquiring bees until you have attended a course; mistakes can be expensive.

Read about our Beginners’ Course by CLICKING HERE. Other Hampshire Associations also offer beginner training; CLICK HERE to find your nearest. Outside Hampshire, you can find a local association by visiting the British Beekeeping Association’s web site.