Nige.Coll
Drone Bee
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2013
- Messages
- 1,778
- Reaction score
- 604
- Location
- East Midlands
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- some + a few more
Has anyone been keeping an eye on the prices of overwintered Nucs?
The prices are getting higher every year this price increase cannot be sustainable.
Last year the price was around £250 for a nuc of bees early season and I'm seeing adverts for next springs nucs at £325 to £350 and nucs in June pre ordered at £280. A lot of the overwintered nucs are sold out at those increased prices.
Brexit has affected the prices as there used to be 2500 packages of bees imported from Europe that were in most circumstances split into 2 and then sold as nucs a bit later in the year leaving a gap of around 4000 nucs to fill.
Can the market sustain the current yearly price increases of around £40 to £50 per year?
This bubble has to burst at some point but at what point, when they reach £400 or higher?
There are still people selling nucs far under this price, I saw one advertised this year at £80 including the poly box but not enough to make an impact on the market and none early enough for people to replace winter losses.
Will the price of nucs reduce the amount of new beekeepers or make current ones improve their overwintering we will see, but it's getting a bit silly now.
On a brighter note I'm glad I'm overwintering 30 just hope they survive as they seem to be worth their weight in gold.
Beekeeping is becoming a very expensive hobby.
Feed going up.
Equipment going up.
Jars going up.
Wood going up.
Poly going up so much it may not be viable.
The only thing not going up is the price of honey.
The prices are getting higher every year this price increase cannot be sustainable.
Last year the price was around £250 for a nuc of bees early season and I'm seeing adverts for next springs nucs at £325 to £350 and nucs in June pre ordered at £280. A lot of the overwintered nucs are sold out at those increased prices.
Brexit has affected the prices as there used to be 2500 packages of bees imported from Europe that were in most circumstances split into 2 and then sold as nucs a bit later in the year leaving a gap of around 4000 nucs to fill.
Can the market sustain the current yearly price increases of around £40 to £50 per year?
This bubble has to burst at some point but at what point, when they reach £400 or higher?
There are still people selling nucs far under this price, I saw one advertised this year at £80 including the poly box but not enough to make an impact on the market and none early enough for people to replace winter losses.
Will the price of nucs reduce the amount of new beekeepers or make current ones improve their overwintering we will see, but it's getting a bit silly now.
On a brighter note I'm glad I'm overwintering 30 just hope they survive as they seem to be worth their weight in gold.
Beekeeping is becoming a very expensive hobby.
Feed going up.
Equipment going up.
Jars going up.
Wood going up.
Poly going up so much it may not be viable.
The only thing not going up is the price of honey.