Thanks for the responses everyone 
Iddee, its not just the eyesight...

Lazy, we wanted to do everything we could to anchor the bees to their new home.
This soccer ball sized swarm did not enter the swarm lure box, but just bearded below the entrance. They roared more than I've ever heard before, were nervous on the frames, bees were almost dripping from the corner of the frames on inspection, and the beekeeper saw no queen. Suspecting a virgin queen, it was ill advised to block the swarm in the box.
These queen cells were capped, so not sure about brood pheromones. The queen cells and pseudo queen strip were an effort to cover as many bases as we could. If the pseudo queen could settle them enough to stay a day or two, they might stick around -it wouldn't hurt anything either way. The pseudo queen manufacturer told me that the substance is tracked around the hive just like the queen pheromone is.
Blueblood, it is the plan to watch them and see what happens. We supplemented them with a good frame of bees and honey and the feeder is on.
Barbarian, Sod's law was new to me so had to look it up

But, Murphy's law is familiar to me.....and Murphy, it seems, is always walking two steps behind me.

Last fall I had four softball sized swarms in my apiary. Three of them usurped mating Nucs. I killed the queens and froze their brood when I read this is a tactic Africanized bees use to expand their territory. Judging from my impression during the initial peek at the bees compared to the bee population during the latest search for the queen, that queen could have left with a softball sized swarm. This swarm gave me the same feeling as the usurping swarms of last fall. It seemed to me that this swarm could have lost a small number of bees. If that was true, that would account for the phantom queen.
I do agree the odds are more likely she was crushed or damaged. The new beekeeper is looking to me for a mentoring explanation. I just want to
appear enlightened about the bees.
