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Chickens and Bees?

5.3K views 27 replies 24 participants last post by  mcon672  
#1 ·
We have chickens that free range during the day on our property, and will be getting bees for the first time this spring. I'm assuming they will coexist ok, but does anyone have suggestions for us prior to starting? The hive will not be next to the coop, it will be closer to another water source that the chickens' water, and I plan to elevate the hive from the ground (although our chickens have no problem flying on top of things). Any other steps I should take?
 
#3 ·
Bees and chickens generally ignore each other. In an abundance of caution, don't confine the chickens close to a hive. For example, you would not want to put a hive in a run and lock up the chickens with the bees. You just want to avoid a situation where if bees got worked up and started stinging chickens the chickens could not run away. Otherwise, no issues at all. A large percentage of beekeepers have chickens.
 
#4 ·
I have a flock of free range bantams that keep bugs down. About once a week during warm weather I scatter some scratch under my hives. Those girls come around every day scratching and looking for a treat. My hope is they find the occasional SHB larva and enjoy it as a snack. They do eat dead bees but I've never caught one eating a live bee.
 
#7 ·
I'm really surprised no one has has the issue we have had of bee flight paths going through a chicken run, which leads to them being eatten by the feistier chickens in rather large numbers. If this happens, the best you can do is put up some sort of solid block that changes the flight paths.
 
#8 ·
Kaz.....
I'm really surprised no one has has the issue we have had of bee flight paths going through a chicken run, which leads to them being eatten by the feistier chickens in rather large numbers. If this happens, the best you can do is put up some sort of solid block that changes the flight paths.
I do find this amazing. Two years in a row on the first few flying days of spring, the bees just mob my chicken feeder. I have never seen a chicken eat a bee.
Cheers
gww
 
#11 ·
My bees are in my chicken run. The chickens keep the ground under and around the hives cleaned up but have never munched on live bees as far as I know. They approach the hives very cautiously and never from the front. I use screened bottom boards in the summer and I assume they also eat the nasty things that fall from the hives.
 
#17 ·
I have both and they do fine together. One change I'm considering though is fencing the chickens' free range area off a bit so they won't be around the hives. During the day the chickens have the side yard to roam (I'm in the city) and in 2-3 yrs. they've gotten it down to dirt in most places as anything that sprouts up is eaten. I want to plant some bee-friendly plants around the hives but will need to fence in the chickens if I want anything to make it.
I'd considered this for a bit and recently saw a chicken jump up, grab one of my blueberry limbs in her beak, drag it down, and while she tore at the leaves, the others ate leaves from the branch. That did it for me.
While the bees and chickens coexist fine, the chickens and vegetation do not.
 
#19 ·
I have chickens and guineas and do not have a problem, actually feed drone comb to the chickens which they don't seem to care much about. I mentored a new beekeeper a couple of years ago who decided to put his 2 hives on the south side of an old barn, got a frantic call from him one morning that swallows roosting in the barn were picking his forages off as they left the hives. After researching swallows and bees the story was that the swallows would eventually get stung in the throat and decide to leave the bees alone after that, although they said that the swallows learn to eat drones and queens if they find them.
Johno
 
#27 ·
I have had chickens for a while and I just got some bees. However, they are quite separated from each other so I don't think they will interact at all.
I have heard that chickens will eat bees, just like other birds that eat bees, but not enough that would cause any concern. Dead bees for sure great for protein for the chickens.