That's some result especially with all that honey too.
Dave Cushman reports a method which ends up with as many nucs in a circle as you think the colony can stand:
http://www.dave-cushman.net/bee/method2.html
In a good year two frames of bees with a queen cell in a polyhive and with as much feed as it wants will reach a good size for winter. So a double brood colony could give you 12+12 (Hoffmans with no dummy) therefore a dozen splits. The trouble is we haven't had a good year for a while. Maybe this time though?
You could just rely on the queen cells the colony makes rather than all that grafting. But I wouldn't do this with a single stock unless there are plenty of drones in the area.
That is all fantasy by the way. I started the association apiary last year with three full colonies. We now have seven and none are large. If the queen mating had gone well and the summer was a good one maybe we'd have had had 20 by now ... but unfortunately we don't.
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