I'll paraphrase a recent post in this forum that basically said every time you plan an inspection, be prepared for some unexpected event that will change your whole approach. This is our first foray into this fantastic adventure.
I got my bees on Saturday. First off, I went out to my proposed site, prepared the site, set and leveled the hives and then contacted my supplier for my 2 nucs. When we got out to the site to load the nucs, the supplier, who is a beek in the area, said the site I had selected was flood prone, and if we had a big rain, my hives would probably float away. Opps. So we relocated the hives further up a hill. Had to reset the hives and level them on rather unlevel ground. After some effort, we got "close enough". I figured a 1/4 bubble on the level was good.
We then prepared to load the nucs. Unfortunately my wife (who was 20 feet away with full gear on), got popped right on the end of her nose when the veil got pushed back to her face. (Ah, the value of hats under the veil.) She handled it like a trooper, and didn't give up on beekeeping yet.
So we got the first nuc loaded. Found the queen and eggs, brood, pollen and nectar, and got the hive reset. Loaded a gallon of 1:1 syrup.
When we got to the second nuc, when we took the top cover off of the nuc, the bees came boiling out of the nuc. LOTS of brood, pollen, nectar, eggs. We did not find the queen. The second nuc had a ton of bees, and also had about 6 queen cells. SO, I am concerned that the colony may be already preparing to swarm. On the lead of the experienced bee supplier and beekeeper, we destroyed the queen cells and set the nuc frames into the hive in a checkerboard pattern to give the colony more room and hopefully prevent a swarm. We loaded a gallon of 1:1 syrup.
Plan is to go back to check on this hive on Tues or Wed to see if they are adapting to the new space or had already decided they were leaving. Any thoughts or suggestions. I need to work on posting pics to better illustrate what I'm seeing. Fact is, when we went out Saturday, the only camera we brought was the cell phone.