Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Greg Martin wrote:Although hopiness plants set lots of lovely flowers, I've read that their flowers require more force for a bee to open and that this can reduce the number of pods that form. I wonder if we could select for flowers that are easier to get into.
Also there's the issue with many northern strains being triploids and not setting seeds. So another issue is selecting for diploids that ripen seeds in a short season.
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My projects on Skye: The tree field, Growing and landracing, perennial polycultures, "Don't dream it - be it! "
greg mosser wrote:greg, i’ve seen wild plants with fairly heavy seed set (and a month+ earlier than the named varieties i’ve been growing), but have lost the genetics along the way. will definitely try to grab some if the occasion presents itself again!
Nancy Reading wrote:I'm so jealous of this project. It's not practical for me to try and replicate here as I've never heard of Hopniss setting seeds here. It does seem to grow for me, and even flowered in the polytunnel, so there is hope maybe.
Greg Martin wrote:Although hopiness plants set lots of lovely flowers, I've read that their flowers require more force for a bee to open and that this can reduce the number of pods that form. I wonder if we could select for flowers that are easier to get into.
I wonder if there is a particular strong armed bee that can get in to polinate them which is not widely populous? I've noticed some of our local bees, cheat and bite though the base of some flowers, which might also prevent them pollinating.
Also there's the issue with many northern strains being triploids and not setting seeds. So another issue is selecting for diploids that ripen seeds in a short season.
Can you tell the difference between them visually, or will the proof be in the seeds setting? With triploid apples they can be pollinated by a normal apple tree, so can a triploid Apois be pollinated by a diploid one resulting in fertile seeds? my genetics is so rusty....this article on dandelions implies that it will be pretty rare, but I don't know whether Hopniss are likely to be the same.
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Greg Martin wrote:The triploid apple is an interesting case. My assumption is that they are able to set fruit when pollinated, but that any seeds would be sterile, if they set seeds.
Greg Martin wrote:My assumption is that they are able to set fruit when pollinated, but that any seeds would be sterile, if they set seeds.
How Permies works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
My projects on Skye: The tree field, Growing and landracing, perennial polycultures, "Don't dream it - be it! "
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