Starting beekeeping is not that hard and does not need to be expensive. You don't have to buy all that professional equipment. Look for a "Top bar hive". It can be easily made from a few wooden boards and is therefore very cheap.
First off, I'm not a professional bee keeper. I've done some research because my family has a bee hive. We wanted bees for our orchard, various gardens, and for the bees themselves. Honey isn't really our primary concern.
If you're considering starting a bee hive, there's good reason to look into Top Bar bee hives.
In our research we found that the standard type of hive, langstroth hives, are really for the manufacture of honey. They come with wax imprints of honeycomb cells on multiple frames to help the bees get started.
The problem with these hives is that the honeycomb is reused after collecting the honey. Yes, this is more efficient because it takes a colony approximately 20 lbs of honey to make a pound of wax. What can, happen is that these cells can be infected with various mites or bacterias. So when the infected frame is replaced into the hive, it can cause serious damage to the hive.
Top-bar hives, on the other hand, are designed to allow the bees to build hanging honey combs. The whole honey comb is removed from the individual top bars. The bees must rebuild the honeycomb completely through.
Happy hives,
Hcc