This could be difficult! There are 4 other beeks that I know of within a 1 mile radius of my house, all with bees in their garden or adjacent land.
Jc
Quite so. Its actually impossible to have that sort of separation, unless you are going to extend England south as far as somewhere like Lisbon (or, if I felt like doing the sums, maybe even Dakar).
That scale of separation can only be an aspiration rather than a thing that can be practically delivered.
The main worry seems to be disease spread. On another thread (or maybe it was earlier in this one) available forage was mentioned and dismissed in favour of disease worries. WELL the shortage of forage leads to stress which increases disease vulnerability. Plenty forage and it is remarkable how many colonies to the square mile you can have with no issues arising.
BIG disease is actually quite rare and it is fairly wise to keep concerns over it in proportion. Be aware, be able to recognise it. Do not foolishly overload areas. Do not stick your bees just over the fence from someone elses. Like so many other things its all common sense.
Our outbreak in Scotland has been laid at the door of lack of bee inspectors. Not so. Only the late diagnosis can be in any way laid at the door of the authorities. The core area of the EFB was seriously overpopulated, too many bees in too many apiaries in too confined an area. 25 years before all was fine as it was the heartland of the raspberry industry and the bees prospered. Plenty forage, good nutrition, good morale, good health. Then the raspberry industry collapsed and is virtually extinct yet the historic patttern of large bee oufits it spawned remains.
Going back to the start of this thread...........another apiary on the same 5 acre plot, preferrably at the extreme point of it, MIGHT not be a big issue except in the mind of the beekeeper losing his exclusivity, depending on available forage. However it IS Lancashire, which is not generally considered a prime beekeeping county and the OP could have a very valid concern. A careful assessment of the forage withing 2 miles of his site, and the proposed one, would tell a lot about whether it is a situation where they could be compatible with eachother.
In the end its the owners land. OK its a reserve but there will be someone who makes the decisions about who has their bees there. It is generally counter productive to be awkward or stroppy in any way with these people as you are likely to find yourself out on you ear. A 'friendly attack', with facts and reason and lavish amounts of honey is best. Even then they might decide against you and decide to do their bit for the communal beekeeping effort rather than the individual. If they do you just have to shake yourself down and move on. Life can be a real cow sometimes, and I have had my share of it.
(The entire UK land area is only enough to give 2.5 colonies per sqare mile. A large proportion of that land is bee useless. If a quarter of it is bee terrtory of worth then the density is already going to be quite high in prime regions.)