Long story short: I am a Newbee. Loaded a nuc 3 days ago (my first), had 6 queen cells (destroyed them all), checkerboarded the frames, provided 1:1 syrup, concerned about swarming, inspected the hive today (4/18).
So, as expected, there were about 6 queen cells being produced in today's inspection. I did not remove any of them. Replenished the syrup, about 1 gallon. With respect to the "checkerboarding" we did actually leave two frames of brood from the original nuc together in the center. Bees are working the new foundation frames and building out comb well. Very strong colony, tons of bees. I brought a deep, thinking that I might need to add it to the mix, but with the bees still working the new frames, it didn't make sense to me to add the extra deep, so we didn't. Bees were very calm today, and nobody got stung (which was a good thing). It was very close to that zen-like feeling I have been looking for.
The swarming concern still exists. Obviously, if the girls are building queen cells, there is something amiss. I removed the queen cells when we loaded the nucs, did not remove them this time. We did not find the queen today. She was not marked prior to loading the nuc, but the colony does not look queenless to me (but what do I know). Do I just brace for a swarm, or can I do something to prevent it? I don't think I'm ready (since my experience at beekeeping is currently measured in days) to split.
Since I haven't lost any bees at this point, I'm not really in panic mode, but I am trying to figure out what I can do to help my colony out. So, I turn to my new-found friends in the beekeeping world. Thanks in advance.
I will say that this was my very first "solo" inspection (although my significant other was with me - who has the same level of experiences as me), and IT WAS AWESOME. PappyRick