- Joined
- Oct 16, 2012
- Messages
- 18,270
- Reaction score
- 9,616
- Location
- Fareham, Hampshire UK
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
Absolutely - but when your starting out you don’t even have a clue about what you don’t know yet, so you don’t know what you need to buy in advance. So you can’t plan for a plan you don’t yet know. Reading helps but doing is King.
Ah... but the OP aspires to three hives so two more as well as the one he has... So, three brood boxes (he'll need at least one spare set for manipulations), three floors, three roofs, six supers, three queen excluders, three stands, 30 more brood frames, 60 shallow frames, foundation.
That's a lot of kit that will be signifcantly cheaper in the winter sales or at the early spring shows. At current prices .. even shopping around .. better part of £500 .. in the sales .. Under £300 if you are clever and keep your eyes open. £200 spare will get you thee good queens with a bit left over to put towards an extractor.
Looking to split this side of winter is just not good economics .. next year .. if he wanted to up the anti to four or fve hives (he'd get a honey crop and hopefully sell a bit) then I'd be the first to say split one of the three later in the year .. and perhaps take a couple of nucs through the next winter with a view to selling one in spring and keeping the other. Another £150 to add to the honey sales and it's starting to pay for itself as a hobby.
Unless the OP has money to burn .. makes much more sense financially. I live in Hampshire .. parts are very good but it varies. Where I live in the Costa del Fareham I don't get massive flows but the season starts early as the climate is mild and then it's generally a steady flow right the way through to the Ivy in October... but this year's wet June .. little beggars cleared just about everything they had stored in spring.