OK. I looked over a few pages on Warre's method and Perone's concerns. Neither seems too terribly off to me, but neither really seems to mandate that I junk all my woodenware, either. Basically, Perone says not to feed bees sugar, and not to rip off more honey than they can spare. Uh, DUH? I was under the impression that feeding was an emergency measure for Northern beekeepers whose bees could starve over a six-month winter, or for administering meds. In Virginia, winter lasts six weeks, with several breaks for defecation flights. My location will have perfectly adequate bee-forage; we selected the place partly on that basis. Maple, sourwood, liriodendron, honey and black locust are all in good supply, as well as a fine autumn bloom of goldenrod and aster. Meds, well, my ex struggled with those and with the varroa, and I've read a bit of the alternative literature. The natural hive structure looks like it might be useful with the varroa; the logic is similar to the people who claim that using small-cell starter comb encourages a more natural comb size that doesn't leave the varroa room to grow. Tracheal mites were never much of a problem for us and mint works just fine on them. I wasn't too keen on the terramycin patties every spring, I was intending to "wait and see" if there really was a need for them as the ex never really settled that issue. A lot of the "standard" methods, frankly, are for people who keep hundreds of hives and cart them all over the country in the backs of trucks, which I can't see as good for any living thing.
All that said, the Warre system requires lifting the ENTIRE COLONY up to place new supers on the bottom. Being under five feet and over fifty, that just ain't gonna fly for me. I can use a stepladder to get up and place a couple of shallow honey supers; we used one or two deeps for the brood area, which would only be disturbed if the ex was trying to mess with the queens. Swarming and supercession was a problem for us; it's better to intentionally place a young queen in an old hive than suddenly find the colony going queenless when you're unprepared. But, that's an issue the ex never really solved on a systematic basis, just tried to deal with as it came up. Looking at these references, I do remember a vague impression that colonies given two full, deep boxes as brood area ("doubles") seemed to do better than his sources were telling him they ought to, and were some of his best. And, uh, given what the mice did to the frames and comb that were left in those boxes, those were a dead loss anyway. I recall that it takes bees a good deal of time and effort to make comb when you rather would like if they were socking away honey. But if it saves me a couple hundred dollars at the outset, I might do best to let the girls do it their own way. Especially if that lets them incorporate their own defense strategies. Are any of you raising bees in Appalachia?