My practice:
opening the carboy introduces oxygen which is concentrated on the surface/ ullage. I sprinkle powder on the surface since that is where the biggest oxidation risk is.
I do not open every three months, I will open a carboy only if there is a processing purpose as racking off the lees or prepping for bottling
I will do mixing at bottling time by pulling a vacuum and letting the bubbles create turbulence
I currently use a solid bung on anything that is eleven or even nine months old, CO2 is my friend
prior to bottling I will pull a vacuum on the carboy with a check valve (like a head space eliminator) roughly every half hour for a day, I monitor the rate of vacuum loss as a measure of how well the wine is degassed
micro oxidation, leakage of oxygen with natural cork closures is useful with red grape wines (5 to 7 mg O2 per liter per year), I am debating if I should be keeping as reductive a beverage, or add tricks that slowly leak oxygen in
there are sulphite calculators on the web which give desired dosage rate based on free SO2. I am curious if anyone on WMT has a data set of what the free SO2 loss rate is, ,,, I sin since haven’t collected my own data on rate of decay, I simply assume it is zero free SO2