This may only apply to a handful of growers but I am interested in discussing best practices for long term pepper breeding in the hobbyist setting.
Whether it someone is trying to stabilize a new phenotype, or someone actively crossing two varieties, what are some of the best ways to go about it?
For example:
Let's say you have Plant A and Plant B; you cross them and grow out two really interesting but really different F1 phenotypes, Plant C and Plant D.
I would guess that most people would begin isolations of Plant C and Plant D to try and make them breed true and that would be the end of it.
For most people, the size of their operation will dictate what resources they can devote to their breeding program. But if someone really wanted to chase specific traits, in a perfect world what would they do?
Would they overwinter / take cuttings and repeat the original cross with the original parent material?
Repeat the original cross with independently isolated seed from the original two parents?
If yes to either, how many times?
Given the interesting phenotypes of Plant C and Plant D, how many times would they review the cross?
What are some personal metrics for evaluating crosses?
How many seeds of each generation would need to be evaluated before making your next cross or isolation?
How many generations down the road before your variety is "pure"? (Conventional wisdom is 8+ correct?)
I know this is a fairly open ended question but I would really like to see what comes of the discussion. Everyone has their own ideas and constraints but I'm sure there are some ways we all could improve. I'm sure there are a few more people here with industry experience that have some metrics, rules of thumb, or tricks of the trade that could be useful for anyone willing to implement them.
Another way of phrasing it:
What would be the ideal set of best practices for a breeding program?
Which of those would be most important for the hobbyist grower?
Which of those would realistically be able to be implemented for the hobbyist grower?
Whether it someone is trying to stabilize a new phenotype, or someone actively crossing two varieties, what are some of the best ways to go about it?
For example:
Let's say you have Plant A and Plant B; you cross them and grow out two really interesting but really different F1 phenotypes, Plant C and Plant D.
I would guess that most people would begin isolations of Plant C and Plant D to try and make them breed true and that would be the end of it.
For most people, the size of their operation will dictate what resources they can devote to their breeding program. But if someone really wanted to chase specific traits, in a perfect world what would they do?
Would they overwinter / take cuttings and repeat the original cross with the original parent material?
Repeat the original cross with independently isolated seed from the original two parents?
If yes to either, how many times?
Given the interesting phenotypes of Plant C and Plant D, how many times would they review the cross?
What are some personal metrics for evaluating crosses?
How many seeds of each generation would need to be evaluated before making your next cross or isolation?
How many generations down the road before your variety is "pure"? (Conventional wisdom is 8+ correct?)
I know this is a fairly open ended question but I would really like to see what comes of the discussion. Everyone has their own ideas and constraints but I'm sure there are some ways we all could improve. I'm sure there are a few more people here with industry experience that have some metrics, rules of thumb, or tricks of the trade that could be useful for anyone willing to implement them.
Another way of phrasing it:
What would be the ideal set of best practices for a breeding program?
Which of those would be most important for the hobbyist grower?
Which of those would realistically be able to be implemented for the hobbyist grower?