Re: HYB: Green Pods
iris@hort.net
  • Subject: Re: HYB: Green Pods
  • From: &* J* <b*@hotmail.com>
  • Date: Sat, 12 Jun 2010 09:05:51 -0500

No, but I'm about to find out. This year I had a beepod on my favorite purple horned TB seedling, and yesterday I cracked 'er open to find lots of big fat white seeds. I don't have any sand, but I planted them on the north side of the vegie bed where there was room. If I keep it watered and mulched along with the vegies I will see what comes up!

Barb in SW MO, who always loves to experiment

----- Original Message ----- From: <RAINACRE@aol.com>
To: <iris@hort.net>
Sent: Wednesday, June 09, 2010 12:43 PM
Subject: Re: [iris] HYB: Green Pods


Like many others I have had good germination from broken off pods with
white seeds when handled in the regular way. Ben Hager harvested his pods while
they were still green and before they started to split open. He
immediately planted the white seeds in a seedbed of pure sand. He felt that the seeds
that  were white had had no chance to develop germination inhibitors and
that they would get total germination faster. I tried a limited experiment
with one pod  planted in regular potting soil in the greenhouse. I saw no
germination until after nearly two months. Unfortunately I didn't keep track of the percentage of germination in this case. Has anyone else had experience
with Hager's  method?

Fred Kerr
Rainbow Acres



Date: Tue, 8 Jun 2010 12:53:48 -0700
From: "Francelle"  <fjmjedwards@q.com>
Subject: RE: [iris] HYB:Early Pods

One year  I opened a pod full of small white seeds.  Because it was a year
of
poor  pod production, I planted them anyway with a note on the label about
immature  seeds.  They germinated and grew as well as the pots of big,
brown
seeds.  I hope that is true this year too.  I have two pods  of a cross I
really want. One is still in the garden. The other got broken off by one
of my helpers and is sitting in a bud vase in my  kitchen window.  It is
still quite green.

Francelle  Edwards  Glendale, AZ  Zone 9


- -----Original  Message-----
From: owner-iris@hort.net [o*@hort.net] On Behalf  Of
autmirislvr@aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 08, 2010 4:28 AM
To:  iris@hort.net
Subject: [iris] HYB:Early Pods

Just a reminder to the  newer hybridizers that a pod doesn't have to go
through
the full 2-3  months in the garden to be viable.

TB2512 is a cross that only spent 22 days in the garden. A bug ate through
the stalk about six inches from  the pod.  It has been hanging on my cork
board
ever since.  The  end of the pod turned black and started splitting so I
harvested it this  morning.  The 45 seed were still white, but full sized.
I've had  germination from a few seed that were white but smaller so I
really
expect  these to germinate.

The split pod is still in the garden and the 3  exposed seeds have turned
brown.  I'm checking it daily and if the seed  start looking loose I will
harvest it.  I want to isolate these seed so  I can monitor germination.

Betty Wilkerson
Bridge In Time Iris  Garden
KY Zone  6

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