Dan K. Liberty
Blazin' like the sun
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2012
- Messages
- 642
- Reaction score
- 36
I can tell you indeed have the passion and interest in this new hobby of yours, tasty :icon_smile: you want to learn everything . . . thats a good sign
backcrossing is breeding a plant to its own kind, not another strain . . . actually, to backcross you first breed two plants of the same strain, then grow out the offspring and use a male of the offspring to breed a clone of the original mom . . . then you can take those offspring and use a male from them to again breed a clone of the original mom . . . and so on . . . you keep crossing back to the original mom, get it ? the result is that the differences between individual phenos becomes less and less, which for some purposes is very desirable - more uniform growth and harvesting.
you can also reverse that and find a very exceptional male, clone it, and keep backcrossing the future generations of females that it produces to the original male.
outcrossing is taking two different strains and creating a hybrid, a mixture of both . . . then picking out the best phenos from the resulting combination . . . the best hybrids come from the most polar opposites - extreme indicas bred to extreme sativas . . .
we all looked at the branching growth on that male blueberry of yours and saw the same thing . . . an interesting candidate for possible breeding (males, especially indica males, often produce very weak branching) . . . but I think you're exactly right, you would do well to concentrate on your girls this trip and just get used to bringing plants all the way to harvest before you delve into pollen chucking . . . . but it's something fun to anticipate in the future !!
jm2c :48:
backcrossing is breeding a plant to its own kind, not another strain . . . actually, to backcross you first breed two plants of the same strain, then grow out the offspring and use a male of the offspring to breed a clone of the original mom . . . then you can take those offspring and use a male from them to again breed a clone of the original mom . . . and so on . . . you keep crossing back to the original mom, get it ? the result is that the differences between individual phenos becomes less and less, which for some purposes is very desirable - more uniform growth and harvesting.
you can also reverse that and find a very exceptional male, clone it, and keep backcrossing the future generations of females that it produces to the original male.
outcrossing is taking two different strains and creating a hybrid, a mixture of both . . . then picking out the best phenos from the resulting combination . . . the best hybrids come from the most polar opposites - extreme indicas bred to extreme sativas . . .
we all looked at the branching growth on that male blueberry of yours and saw the same thing . . . an interesting candidate for possible breeding (males, especially indica males, often produce very weak branching) . . . but I think you're exactly right, you would do well to concentrate on your girls this trip and just get used to bringing plants all the way to harvest before you delve into pollen chucking . . . . but it's something fun to anticipate in the future !!
jm2c :48: