wow
Absolutely. I wonder if the cross produced a large number of seedlings or just a small number.Terry, We already knew that polyploid forms of Fritz were way better than the diploids. When Lovely Lynne started to bloom out online it was also clear that this cross was exceptional. So when I saw an offering of a sib cross of tetraploid LLs it was a bit of a no brainier!
I’m sorry but we sold our entire stock of Phragmipedium hybrids a year ago We still have kovachii siblings and besseae siblingsPete,
you ought to get in touch with Mike Tibbs at the Exotic plant company.
Nobody I know is selling this cross in the USA at present but maybe a flask or two made it over there?
David
The flasks I offered were sibling crosses of two colchine treated plants. So there was a good chance of nice 4N seedlings from the cross but also a few hexaploid seedlings. I have seen quite a few exceptional seedlings from this crossing from customers who purchased the flasksDavid, when you first posted about Lovely Lynne, it was a single plant that was not from this group of seedlings, is that correct? Lovely Lynne wasn't registered by Michael Tibbs until 2020 so I am thinking you got your first plant before registration? Were you told that original plant was tetraploid or is it only this group of seedlings that was noted as tetraploid?
I suspect that there was chemical conversion in there somewhere to get the tetraploidy but I am not sure at what stage.
Thanks for the information. It all fits with the great flowers.The flasks I offered were sibling crosses of two colchine treated plants. So there was a good chance of nice 4N seedlings from the cross but also a few hexaploid seedlings. I have seen quite a few exceptional seedlings from this crossing from customers who purchased the flasks
Yep. When you have a strong cross, a sibling cross can strengthen some desirable traits in offspring, ending up with plants that are even better than the two parents. Of course, a number of the offspring can also be worse than the two parents. But, with the whole flask, you are going to be able to select the very best.So it’s possible for a sib cross to uncover more variation in a cross than was found in the initial cross.
You can do that in two ways.
For a start, you are making more lines of the cross.
Then, it is possible that the genetics of inheritance within the cross can work differently in a sib cross compared to the original cross between the two different grexes. This can then produce plants with some different characteristics. The reason for this complex and probably not worth visiting.
In the case of this particular cross, both parents are supposed to be tetraploids, through conversion using colchicine.
Making the cross and observing the progeny would be a way of confirming that.
Your Lovely Lynne is rounder and flatter. My tetraploid Jason Fischer is growing better now and has become two plants, but your crop of Lovely Lynne is more robust. Do you think it is the difference in how you are growing them? Maybe this group of Phrags really does like to have the roots grow out horizontal. The plants then grow and bloom better? This may be telling us that they want air close to the roots but don’t want to be dry. It is tricky to create this in many potting situations.Indeed you do especially when you add another set of chromosomes and make it tetraploid. The flower has just fallen off this afternoon and it’s still pan flat with very thickly textured petals.
The pollen is being used as we speak on a couple of different plants. If either set seed and we see good germination then it’s almost certain that it’s a tetraploid.
I’d love to see a flower a more coloured like yours but with the shape of mine. There were signs of a branch in the leaf axils on my plants so fingers crossed that these develop when the plant is mature.
I grow just one other tetraploid plant, a Jason Fisher. Compared to these plants it’s glacially slow to grow and the flowers are small. I know which I prefer. If I get them to bloom together I may be tempted to cross them.
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