Homeadmin

Dreaming. Doing.

Creating forward thinking, environmentally conscious products that address the problems of everyday consumers.

The future isn’t possible without a healthy balance of ingenuity and follow through, and our overarching goal is to establish a company that provides answers to the questions of tomorrow, whether energy, agriculture, aquaculture, or beyond.

Our first project?  Honey bees, or more importantly designing a more user friendly swarm trap to catch them, called The refuBees Swarm Trap.

Cheaper Alternative
Cheaper Alternative
Want a chance to catch local bees at a fraction of the cost of packages? Our refuBees Swarm Trap encourages swarms to settle, and unlike current traps on the market, accommodates medium frames.
Easy Assembly
Easy Assembly
Simple 4 steps. Separate halves, insert frames, bait the trap with lure, then close trap by screwing halves together. Hang in a tree and you're ready to catch a swarm.
Frame Flexibility
Frame Flexibility
Our simple design incorporates both wood and plastic frames, foundation or foundation-less. A total of six medium frames can be inserted into The Bee Box.
Save Time
Save Time
Hang a trap, and check at your leisure. Once a swarm is caught, it's as easy as moving the frames from our refuBees Swarm Trap right into your hive (allowing a day or two for the bees to acclimate to the new area).

Interesting story, I was using what we called a “swarm box” to rear queens (basically we shook about 3 lbs. of nurse bees into  a screened box with food and very young larvae, which tricks the bees to turn those larvae into new queens).  After the queen cells were made, I opened the box to let the nurse bees go.  Usually they just return to the hive they came from.  But for some reason this time they all went to the swarm trap that was tied on the fence behind the building.  It wasn’t exactly a natural swarm, but apparently the trap was attractive to bees!  We put a queen inside the box and the bees all went in and became a functioning hive.

- Chia L. Columbus, OH

My wife and I were able to hang two traps on our property this year and by late spring we had a swarm settle in each.  Not being a beekeeper, I found it fascinating to watch the bees go about their daily routine.

- David F. Lebanon, OH

With swarms occasionally checking out, and once settling under, my building’s siding it’s nice to direct the bees towards a safer alternative.  Now I notice scouts coming and going from the refuBees Swarm Trap, and not threatening our homeowner’s association with another thousand dollar renovation, or worse exterminator, bill to its exterior.

- Rosemary H. Vancouver, BC

Interesting story, I was using what we called a “swarm box” to rear queens (basically we shook about 3 lbs. of nurse bees into  a screened box with food and very young larvae, which tricks the bees to turn those larvae into new queens).  After the queen cells were made, I opened the box to let the nurse bees go.  Usually they just return to the hive they came from.  But for some reason this time they all went to the swarm trap that was tied on the fence behind the building.  It wasn’t exactly a natural swarm, but apparently the trap was attractive to bees!  We put a queen inside the box and the bees all went in and became a functioning hive.

- Chia L. Columbus, OH

My wife and I were able to hang two traps on our property this year and by late spring we had a swarm settle in each.  Not being a beekeeper, I found it fascinating to watch the bees go about their daily routine.

- David F. Lebanon, OH

With swarms occasionally checking out, and once settling under, my building’s siding it’s nice to direct the bees towards a safer alternative.  Now I notice scouts coming and going from the refuBees Swarm Trap, and not threatening our homeowner’s association with another thousand dollar renovation, or worse exterminator, bill to its exterior.

- Rosemary H. Vancouver, BC

Interesting story, I was using what we called a “swarm box” to rear queens (basically we shook about 3 lbs. of nurse bees into  a screened box with food and very young larvae, which tricks the bees to turn those larvae into new queens).  After the queen cells were made, I opened the box to let the nurse bees go.  Usually they just return to the hive they came from.  But for some reason this time they all went to the swarm trap that was tied on the fence behind the building.  It wasn’t exactly a natural swarm, but apparently the trap was attractive to bees!  We put a queen inside the box and the bees all went in and became a functioning hive.

- Chia L. Columbus, OH

My wife and I were able to hang two traps on our property this year and by late spring we had a swarm settle in each.  Not being a beekeeper, I found it fascinating to watch the bees go about their daily routine.

- David F. Lebanon, OH

With swarms occasionally checking out, and once settling under, my building’s siding it’s nice to direct the bees towards a safer alternative.  Now I notice scouts coming and going from the refuBees Swarm Trap, and not threatening our homeowner’s association with another thousand dollar renovation, or worse exterminator, bill to its exterior.

- Rosemary H. Vancouver, BC