At my grandson's urging, I've begun preparing my hives for next year--- reducing the hives to one brood box only (no supers), removing the old queens and on Friday I'll be introducing ripe queen cells he's purchasing.
I haven't done this in years. Usually I leave my hives "topped up" with one honey super (which is not really needed because of our mild winters).
I keep telling him that I'm in bees as a hobbyist, while he is in it to make a living and that difference makes for a great difference in hive management. He wants as much honey as he can possibly get, so he wants young productive queens. I'm afraid to get too much honey, lest I have nothing to do with it, so I'm happy with my "tired, worn out queens" and only replace them when they really are all washed out.
Now I'll have to keep track of the success rate in getting the queen cells accepted, the virgins mated and the hives' winter development. Not wanting to build them up feeding them sugar syrup, I'l have to go into my stocks of honey and feed it to them when February comes around.
The more I think about what I'm getting into, the more I think that my season is winding UP, not down.