Re: HYB: winter planning
- Subject: Re: HYB: winter planning
- From: &* M* <c*@impressiveirises.com.au>
- Date: Wed, 6 Dec 2006 05:31:10 +1030
- List-archive: <http://www.hort.net/lists/iris/> (Web Archive)
Ahhh Linda
If only I had the time to indulge in all those processes, Mind you, I don't
get kept indoors as much as you are, over winter. Our winters tend to
disappear in a haze of transplanting and weeding and getting to bookwork
right for the taxman (31 June end of tax year), then stocktaking and writing
the catalogue/website and more weeding.
I do tend to note what parents give good seedlings and use them more, other
than that I mostly let the blooms talk to me. For all I plan crosses usually
it get disrupted because the flowers bloom at the wrong time, don't produce
pollen or the earwigs beat me to it, or it's too dry/too wet when they're
both out etc. I do tend to save pollen from my favourite parents but that
doesn't always mean I have it when I want it.
Colleen Modra
Adelaide Hills
South Australia
colleen@impressiveirises.com.au
www.impressiveirises.com.au
----- Original Message -----
From: "Linda Mann" <lmann@lock-net.com>
To: "iris- talk" <iris@hort.net>
Sent: Tuesday, December 05, 2006 11:57 PM
Subject: [iris] HYB: winter planning
As I scratch my head over this year's results, trying to plan for spring
pollen daubing, I wonder how the rest of you go about this?
Here's what I do
1) make sure I have pedigrees for everything I might consider using, with
rebloom potential, neglecta/amoenas, tangerine factor, colors/patterns
noted.
2) update notes on germination and survival rates for various types of
crosses & look for possible patterns of successes & failure. As we all
keep saying, anything can happen in a particular cross, & while I will
continue to experiment with low survival crosses, I don't want them <all>
to be that way!
3) review types of crosses I've tried in relation to my goals - look for
total failures (either seedlings were not healthy enough, or blooms were
dreadful (worse than both parents), or the cross didn't give the type of
result I hoped for, or crosses failed. Look for patterns of failure &
decide if I want to try some different combinations using the same group
of parents, mix in additional parents, or try something totally different
to try for the same goal, <or> if I want to abandon that whole approach
for this breeding season (i.e., wait to see if something in the seedling
patch or new cultivars might give a better chance in the future).
4) look at surviving 'junk'/experimental crosses to see if there is
anything possibly worth pursuing. Good example of this is the IC1 X
"Pretty Baby" cross that produced all those surprise rebloomers. They are
BB, which I do <not> want to be working with, but some interesting
potential there. Also see if junk/experiments give me some insight into
what might work or not work for other types of crosses (i.e., messy hafts)
5) make a spreadsheet or lists of potential parents and which goals they
would (hopefully) be working towards. Look for missing types of parents I
need to reach goals, try to figure out whether or not I may have something
that will work, or if I need to go shopping <g> Also look for <several>
potential crosses that will advance towards each goal.
From the above, I can usually make a list of the crosses I want to try.
Once bloom season is here, some of these will obviously be bad choices
when I see the plants in bloom, and a lot (most) of the crosses I actually
make will not be the ones I plan. But all the planning helps me fix goals
and approaches and needed information in my mind ahead of time.
For me, the most difficult part of all of this comes during actual daubing
season, when my curiosity gets the best of me and I want to see what
<every> possible combination will produce!
--
Linda Mann east Tennessee USA zone 7/8
East Tennessee Iris Society <http://www.korrnet.org/etis>
American Iris Society web site <http://www.irises.org>
talk archives: <http://www.hort.net/lists/iris-talk/>
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