"River, Okay won't set them together. And, I don't remember what a walk away split is. I'll see if I can find a youtube on that.
1) I was thinking that if we take two splits from the hive... that would then be 3 hives. But you are prob thinking that it would be 1 hive and 2 splits?
2) Re: queen cells:
And, let's see.. thinking.. He wants to avoid swarming, so then we would wait for queen cells. Pull a nuc with original queen, set aside. Pull another nuc making sure it has queen cells. Then leave the original hive with queen cells as well.....??
3) Is a three way split the same as a walk away split?"
jen, not setting them together is just my personal way of what i do with divides, for many reasons. a walk away is basically dividing a hive in half, leaving the queen in one box and leaving the other box with eggs to develop a queen and like scott said, a long time for a queen to be born, mated and figure out if she's viable. a lot of babysitting for these. they will dwindle considerably. many other variables about walkaways that are not very practical.
i misunderstood you, so now i understand what you are saying. any divide you do and let the bees figure the queen rearing out is a walkaway; typically walkaway's are when beeks take a strong hive and divide it in half but leave one box with eggs to rear a queen. you want to accomplish this with an additional box. i would be hesitant at dividing a strong hive into three. two would be more practical, unless he has some specific goal in mind. if it were a three deep hive busting at the seams, no problem.
"He wants to avoid swarming, so then we would wait for queen cells. Pull a nuc with original queen, set aside. Pull another nuc making sure it has queen cells. Then leave the original hive with queen cells as well.....??"
jen, by completing divides and removing frames with queen cells is a great way to avoid any swarming, this fools the bees into thinking they swarmed.
i have had great success with utilizing swarm cells in divides/nucs. not so good luck with walkaway's.
EDIT AND ADD:
walkaways, your chances with walkaways.....if queen rearing fails/and or the queen is a dud, you stand a great chance to lose the bees as well. population dwindles way down and even if there are bees that remain, it may be hard to combine them.