While I was basking in my bee's apparent successes, I started doing some basic calculations on the potential growth of these new packages.
10 frames of drawn comb and supplies and add a package of bees.
Queen laying ~1k per day and estimating ~3k cells per frame available for laying. Then I took 10 frames (OK call it 8 just to round down) and you have a possible 24000 cells for brood which should take the queen 24 days to lay in all cells in a perfect world.
Anything she laid since being released needs 21 days to emerge and another 18 or so to begin foraging. So her first brood to start gathering won't do so until sometime in early June. From that point the hive population and foraging power should grow exponentially until mid August where historically we are in a dearth and the queen stops or dramatically slows egg laying for a bit.
Taking the numbers above as gospel I applied the same numbers to the split that I made a few weeks ago.
For this split I need to figure out When to add the second deep(also drawn comb).
Yeah, I could just look at them and see what is what; but I 'm having fun with this exercise.

split on 4/19 approx 2 frames of bees and brood (all stages) and added a mated queen. For simplicity I'll say 2k capped brood, 2k larvae and 2k eggs.
Took 1 week for her to be let out (time constraints on my part and bees that were not interested I guess.) In any event she was out on the 26th
so, I'm saying 24k cells available total, but starting with 6k already laid and in various stages of growth which leaves her initially with 16,000 cells to lay in which should take her two weeks give or take.
Capped brood should have been out on the 2nd week or may 3 with all of the other brood that came over with the split following. At some point there will be a break ,1 week or so, in the brood cycle accounting for the new queen setting up shop.
Not counting any foragers that came over with the split, new foragers should be coming on line right around the 24th of may with more following
All of this is based on having enough bees to cover whatever brood is laid.
I guess the real question is ; How many bees does it take to cover a frame of brood? because that number will probably do more to dictate the growth rate than most any other factor.