
Originally Posted by
Gray Goose
aran, I guess I have been reading too much of the lazy beekeeper from Michael Bush. I would leave the production hives alone, and produce Honey from all of them. I have about the same number of hives as you and last year used a 2 basket Hand Crank extractor and a few pails with screens on. 400 or so quarts with my only expense as stickers and jars. I think Increase and toys are too aggressive for 1 years plans. And today you are not really big enough to max out the extraction house, Unless you are extracting for several others. I'll Admit my arm got sore, but the family helped and it only took 2 long weekends to complete. I would take the 10 over wintered NUCs and leave them fill up and do swarm prep. when you have the Swarm cells take the 4x4x4 NUCs and split them into 3 -4 frame NUCs which hopefully get you 30 4 frame NUCs. With all the splits you are talking about, above, your toys for the extraction House may be paided for and no honey to put thru them. I would take the best 10 splits and make them in to production for next year. Leave 15 or so for your self to winter and sell 5 of the nucs for some funds. Try to go into next winter with 25 production hives and 15 4x4x4 NUCs. The time and resources to make the cell starter and finisher and the grafting time , I would invest into checking the NUCs every 5 or 6 days for QCs and splitting accordingly. You will end up with better Genetic Diversity and more production. I always get nervousness making 20 daughter queens from one hive. I have seen 2nd and 3 generation seem great then 4th generation go into the weeds. I Have to admit I am a fan of letting the bees pick the egg/larvae to make a queen from, rather than I. I know the Queen decides to make a winter bee or a drone, I am convinced she also "selects" Just the right egg for a queen, So I let her do it. Good luck with your decision. Do the math a few ways and then go for it. Slow and steady wins the race. Enjoy the journey and put less emphasis on the end goal.
Gray Goose
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