Thanks alot. i appreciate itrghm1u20 said:YES.
Typical seeds will produce mostly typical pods. Not necessary 100%, but most of it.
Selecting a specific shape, generation after generation, will lead to a stable shape.
az1000 said:No. That plant has the same DNA
Grow a few from each type of pods and see.
Martino said:
will different pods produce true offspring to the pod or does it not matter.
Thanks man. I thought i messed up. I am a newby. I did put every plants seeds together. tnks againKrakenPeppers said:I wrote a long passage about a small round pod having seeds that will produce the same plants that a massive wrinkled pod from the same plant would provided the pollination was identical. but like I always seem to have, the page managed to get cleared...
Needless to say, Every pod on a plant pollinated by the same source should make identical baby plants.. However I believe that the individual pod 'Can' affect the resulting seed DNA, but I have nothing to prove this in any way.
Thanks for your input. I am kicking myself. I planted my Butch T, Carolina Reaper and Ghost Peppers close to one another, about 2-3 Feet. One of the seeds i am growing shows a mix between Ghost and Butch T. Looks like I must start over.Hybrid Mode 01 said:
It depends on how the flower was pollenated. If it was pollenated by a different plant, then no, that fruit will not produce true offspring. If it was self pollenated, then it will basically be the same as all the others (that were also self pollenated).
In short, there's no way of knowing until you grow it out. Grow as many as you can to increase your chances of getting what you want.
If your plant (or flower) was isolated, there is less chance of cross-pollination.
cruzzfish said:Depends. In this case I'd say no, because you mention that the plant sometimes makes pods that look like regular butch T. If there were two plants though, and one made butch T shaped pods and another Moruga, then you'd pick the one that you wanted the next generation to look like. In this case the reason for the difference is probably environmental, and you'd get the same average plant no matter which pod you chose.
rghm1u20 said:Well, I have sent a pod of a Red Caribbean pepper to a guy, he sow some seeds, and get a plant. The plant produced different pods (not like Red Caribbean), it looks the pepper sent by me was the result of a cross pollination. On that plant, one pod had a strange shape, different from all others. Now I have few seeds of this in the dirt. let's see what they will grow
Hybrid Mode 01 said:For SCIENCE!!! Just make sure the seeds you grow weren't the product of cross pollination too.
Buzzman19 said:I tend to select the best looking or ideal pod pheno's when saving seeds for private use or growing. Generally selecting a certain type of pheno trait and growing from those seeds can influence future generations but it would take many generations to influence the desired pheno you are looking for.
cheers