I hope to have a pipeline soon... Right now I have only a few bottles left from my first two brews. One of those, a 1L of honey porter, I want to keep for a few more months before having it. That way, I'll see how it is after 4-6 months bottle aging.
I also have two brews aging on oak chips (one vanilla honey porter, and one old ale) with two more brews in primary (a English pale ale and an Irish amber ale)... As soon as one carboy is free, or I get something else to brew in, I'm going to brew another batch. Thinking it will be a Boddington's Pub Ale clone.
The hardest part of all this, is I'm now using longer primary fermenting stages (and not using secondary except for aging elements). The pale ale should be ready to go into bottles within 1-2 weeks (so either this weekend, or the following) with the Irish being maybe a week behind that. I'm using the 2-4 week primary stage mode right now (longer for bigger brews). I'm also gearing up to start kegging...
Oh, and since I brewed the English pale ale with someone else, I won't get the full 5 gallons. The English and Irish are my first two AG brews... I have enough grain/base malt on hand for one more brew before I'll need to get more... I hope to be able to get a crusher/mill by the time I need more grain. Then I'll just get 55 pound sacks of base and 5-10 pounds of specialty grains at a time... Then, a few more primary fermenting vessels to add to what I have and I'll be good to go...
My plan is to always have at least one brew about to be bottled, or carbonating, every two weeks. I'm looking to keg, so that it will be easier for me to move to a new place in 6-8 months. Won't need to worry about dropping full bottles.

Oh, and I will be making a keezer within 1-2 months. A fermentation chamber will be on the books in the next 3-4 months... If I hit those targets, then summer heat won't be an issue, or reason to make me slow down my brewing cycle... Warmer weather brews will also be nice to come home to.
