The summer nectar flows are coming to an end now so the bees won't draw much new comb. You might be lucky and have the hive near some balsam? (found along rivers/damp areas) otherwise it's dribs and drabs until the ivy flowers. Not really warm enough for clover currently.
They will need feeding...
Seen a few bees working the clover in the garden for the first time today, forecast is still cool though so I don't think they'll make much of it. Bramble is 80-90% done here so it'll be slim pickings soon with just the garden flowers and whatever wildflowers manage escape the farmer's topper.
Why is the hive so quiet? Are you sure that you've not got a hornets nest in there? 😅
I would reduce right down to a couple of cm as below. Wasps will rob that out in no time otherwise.
I would lever each frame up individually using a J tool, or even two J tools to do both sides together. Although it can be slightly alarming when you can't get the boxes apart, it's usually easier than you expect to sort out. Just take your time, do a bit on one side, bit on the other and ease...
Just throwing it out there as an idea. Some people want all the honey in the supers. No idea how prolific the queen is, or if there is abundant forage in the vicinity. 🤷♂️
8 langstroth brood frames have the same comb area as 11 national brood frames. So treat it as you would a national hive. Many queens will need more than a single national brood, but you can always use extra dummy boards if you feel that the double is too big. You many find they don't lay up the...
Had a similar experience last week. Prime swarm decided to move into the single nuc on the bottom (occupied, but very weak after winter) instead of the lovely empty double nuc directly above it 🤦♂️Had to add a brood extension in the evening just so get them all inside. Queen now happily laying...
I know, and I'm sure it works well enough when you can look for royal jelly in cells on a shorter inspection cycle. But on 9 day inspections your losses are going to increase quite a bit I would have thought.