Beautiful pheno & very unique Jeff!
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One thing I'm not is an expert but I try to learn everything I can when situations like this come up so I started with "back crossing" as I don't remember this being discussed before.>
Introduction to Backcross Breeding In reading through it I think this breeding method is to introduce a wanted gene into a plant without it. Will back crossing a wanted gene into a plant that already has it work or help stabilize that gene? Dunno.... Anyone have insight?
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Of course growing out to stabilize a trait is often discussed and my fall-back treatise is one on peppers relative, the tomato.>
Tomato Gene Basics The chart from
mrgrowguy is in this information packed crossing guide and you'll note just above it on page 2 is the progression from F1 through F8 where the percentage of plants that will grow the trait crosses to 99% and not much improvement happens after that, hence F8 is generally considered the cut point.
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If you're serious about dedicating next season to this project I think you need to consider that the current plant is F1 and the plants from these seeds will only produce 50% of the pheno your looking for. Of course you won't know which plants are going to produce the wanted trait so that's a lot of isolation to get a batch of seeds that potentially have a 25% chance. I'm not trying to discourage you, just wanted you to know the amount of dedication needed is what usually discourages others. As mrgrowguy posted, "
Selection is key. The more plants you grow out, the more you'll have to select from. Keep selecting the same trait over and over again through each generation.".
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Last is the cloning suggestions, if you want a large quantity of pods next season this is the best way to produce the pheno, but of course this is still a F1 plant with no progress in isolating the trait.Â
Whatever you choose to do, GOOD LUCK! and keep us posted.
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