It’s a question of juggling the bottle supply. Also wanted some feedback on bulk aging. What I am hearing so far is don’t bulk age for more than two years correct?
It depends on the container and what else you're doing to the wine.
If in a container that doesn't affect the wine (glass or stainless steel), IMO the main purpose of bulk aging is to ensure the wine is clear and give it initial time to age as a single until, which (also IMO) is 9 to 12 months. I'll add the caveat that bulk aging helps ensure the wine
will age, as no one is drinking it.
Another caveat is if the wine is being modified by adding oak adjuncts, adjusting acid, etc., keeping the wine in bulk for a few months after a change lets it adjust to the change(s) as a unit before bottling.
If the container is one that affects the wine (e.g., barrel), then extended bulk aging changes the wine, and it makes sense to keep it in the container as long as desired.
I must agree with
@crushday, that wine is safer in the bottle. I tend to bottle wine as soon as it makes sense to do so, which can be 4 to 9 months for carboys and often 12+ months for barrels (I bottle last year's barrel when new wine is ready to replace it).
But as
@ChuckD said, other things affect wine care and bottling. I've delayed bottling because I didn't have enough bottles, and because I didn't have free time. I've also bottled earlier than planned because I knew I wasn't going to have time later. And because I knew I was going to need those carboys and needed to clear space. Nope -- there is no unambiguous answer.