Giant 10,000+ bee colony discovered in ceiling during pub renovation

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Shocking video shows a giant colony of 10,000 bees, which was discovered living inside the ceiling of a London pub.

The huge nest, seen in the video (click to play above) was discovered during restoration works to an old pub, where it’s believed they were living for at least ten years. The bees were known to the pub's new management when they took the project on as buzzing could be heard and bees could be seen flying around.

But Jake Miller, 58, one of the creative directors with Remarkable Pubs, was shocked when they discovered the size of the nest. Jake said: "It was definitely not what we were expecting when we opened up the ceiling. It's a very large nest that runs through the whole room and we'd only seen a handful of bees at that point. It took a team of three workers three days to fully evacuate the bees.”

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The formerly known Leyton Technical Pub, in Waltham Forest, is getting a major facelift after it was bought by Remarkable Pubs last year.

Bee removal company work to remove the ten-year-old bee nest discovered in Leyton Engineer pub in Leyton, London, August 15 2024.Bee removal company work to remove the ten-year-old bee nest discovered in Leyton Engineer pub in Leyton, London, August 15 2024.
Bee removal company work to remove the ten-year-old bee nest discovered in Leyton Engineer pub in Leyton, London, August 15 2024. | Jake Miller / SWNS

Jake said: "It's certainly been a big job but it got sorted quite quickly. The bee people came along and hoovered up the bees to transport them somewhere safe. All the lava and honeycomb have had to be removed as well so there's less chance of another nest."

A chance bees could re-build nest

The work is not quite done yet as Jake and his restoration team must do everything they can to prevent the nest from re-growing.

Jake said: "We still have to make sure it is completely cleaned and sealed. There is always going to be some straggler bees who will return to the ceiling and attempt to rebuild the nest. That's why it's so important we ensure that it's properly cleaned out and boarded up."

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Home-grown honey

The bees have left behind a significant amount of honey residue which Jake is hoping they can bottle and sell as Leyton Engineer Honey. Jake said: "It would be really nice to have some actual home-grown honey in the middle of London. I hope we can make that work with what we've got left."

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