Pulsegleaner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2014
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Hi all
As I sort of promised. This is the first of what I hope will be an annual series of threads over the next three to four years keeping record of my progress towards my goal of trying to adapt the Ugandan Mottled Grey Bean (from Richter's Seed Zoo) to a more northerly climate and a lesser day length. I have marked this as Year 2 since technically last year's essays were year one, since I DID get a plant to make mature seed. But one plant out of 40-50 starter seed making it is not really enough to be worth making a retroactive thread, especially when that one only made 6 seeds (4 if you don't count the second pod worth, which are a bit immature)
As per the set out plan, this years seed was all seed bearing the mottled seed coat trait (sort of like the Pebblestone pattern, but a bit darker) and long slender seed shape. Originally I had planned to plant ALL mottled seeds this year, but given how many slender there were, and the fact I only can devote one bean pot to this experiment per year (need room for the other beans and such after all). I decided the other shapes would probably be swamped out anyway (there were maybe 15 or so seeds of the other shapes in total, versus about 135 slender) and it would be better to hold them until year 4 (year three is for the solid black seeds) when I will be down to the progeny to that date and a smattering of off types (black with brown speckles, brown, red, tan with brown streaks etc.) and will have a lot more room*.
appx 135 beans were planted in the pot (I know that sounds like a ridiculous amount for one small pot but given that I KNOW these beans will suffer heavy losses at each stage, 135 now probably works out to 20 or so by the time they have a few leaves.
Germination was around 50-60% as is normal for this seed (the Richter's stuff from Africa is really, really old, and showing it) five seeds proved to be hard seeds, and were removed (whether they get nicked an returned to the pot or simply held as backup for year 4 depends on how things go with the rest) Of those appx 65-75 seedlings, 30 or so seem to be developing in an acceptable manner
Whether the others became malformed due to age or due to planting errors (the seeds are pretty symmetrical, so I probably planted quite a few upside down) is hard to tell at this point.
So far progress seems acceptable. In fact the pot is probably ready to be brought out and placed on it's pedestal (one of the few advantages of a bean that may still be Andes adapted is that it tends to be OK with cool weather. It's HEAT it hates. I want to get them out while they are still smallish, so they don't get too leggy indoors (I lost a lot that way last year, the wind basically snapped the whole first planting. )
Updates as they come.
* This may mean there will be a surge in yield in year 4 since the producing one from last year seems to be a short fat seeded one.
As I sort of promised. This is the first of what I hope will be an annual series of threads over the next three to four years keeping record of my progress towards my goal of trying to adapt the Ugandan Mottled Grey Bean (from Richter's Seed Zoo) to a more northerly climate and a lesser day length. I have marked this as Year 2 since technically last year's essays were year one, since I DID get a plant to make mature seed. But one plant out of 40-50 starter seed making it is not really enough to be worth making a retroactive thread, especially when that one only made 6 seeds (4 if you don't count the second pod worth, which are a bit immature)
As per the set out plan, this years seed was all seed bearing the mottled seed coat trait (sort of like the Pebblestone pattern, but a bit darker) and long slender seed shape. Originally I had planned to plant ALL mottled seeds this year, but given how many slender there were, and the fact I only can devote one bean pot to this experiment per year (need room for the other beans and such after all). I decided the other shapes would probably be swamped out anyway (there were maybe 15 or so seeds of the other shapes in total, versus about 135 slender) and it would be better to hold them until year 4 (year three is for the solid black seeds) when I will be down to the progeny to that date and a smattering of off types (black with brown speckles, brown, red, tan with brown streaks etc.) and will have a lot more room*.
appx 135 beans were planted in the pot (I know that sounds like a ridiculous amount for one small pot but given that I KNOW these beans will suffer heavy losses at each stage, 135 now probably works out to 20 or so by the time they have a few leaves.
Germination was around 50-60% as is normal for this seed (the Richter's stuff from Africa is really, really old, and showing it) five seeds proved to be hard seeds, and were removed (whether they get nicked an returned to the pot or simply held as backup for year 4 depends on how things go with the rest) Of those appx 65-75 seedlings, 30 or so seem to be developing in an acceptable manner
Whether the others became malformed due to age or due to planting errors (the seeds are pretty symmetrical, so I probably planted quite a few upside down) is hard to tell at this point.
So far progress seems acceptable. In fact the pot is probably ready to be brought out and placed on it's pedestal (one of the few advantages of a bean that may still be Andes adapted is that it tends to be OK with cool weather. It's HEAT it hates. I want to get them out while they are still smallish, so they don't get too leggy indoors (I lost a lot that way last year, the wind basically snapped the whole first planting. )
Updates as they come.
* This may mean there will be a surge in yield in year 4 since the producing one from last year seems to be a short fat seeded one.