"My problem with walk away splits. I live in cow pasture country and the main flow here happens early. If I do this before the flow neither of these will make surplus honey. Here a hive has to be strong to put up a surplus.
Splitting after the flow would be ok but if they swarmed there's no surplus honey and the hive is not strong enough to split IMO.
I just believe there are better methods."
there are better methods. like tecumseh i would not recommend walkaway splits to any new beekeeper. the failure rate is very high, and one does not have the benefit of enough knowledge of the dynamics and biology of a hive to recognize a problem, unless you have a mentor helping you. if you are lucky, your walkaway split will take most of the season to build up, and get them ready for winter. you will not have surplus honey.
i always say have a purpose and what do you want to accomplish? more bees? more honey? a little of both? swarm management?
woody you don't have to do a complete divide of your hives, you can do a 'soft' divide of your strongest colonies, just enough to keep them from swarming, before a flow, and they will put up a honey surplus in a good nectar flow.
this is how i do my divides, post #1 this thread:
SPRING DIVIDEStbone~
"After moving the frames with the queen to the new box, you have some space in the old box. Do you place drawn comb in that space or undrawn foundation?"i don't always move the queen. drawn comb goes in the center and undrawn to the outside.