Tag Archives: DOH!

Unfortunate First Harvest

Sarracenia alata AF F2Sarracenia alata AF F2 seeds. The unfortunate first harvest of 2012.

With all this moving, there was bound to be a casualty or two. One of the plants, I’m sad to report, didn’t quite make it. Anthocyanin free Sarracenia alata. (DAMN IT!) I was pretty upset even when I found this plant reduced to compost. I’ve come to accept that I will lose plants from time to time. I was really upset that it was a good plant. I was doubly PISSED that it was an anthocyanin free plant. If you haven’t figured it out by now, I am totally enamored by anthocyanin free plants. (Or simply”AF” for short. Also see: definition of anthocyanin.) I wanted to use this plant in future crosses pretty badly. But hey, stuff happens to us all. The stress from the division early in the year, poor conditions, energy spent in seed production, combined with another move — heck, all of that could of contributed to the plants demise.

There is a bright spot in this unfortunate loss: earlier in the year she threw up a flower and I self pollinated it. I checked the pod before I threw the plant out and I saw it had seeds. The reason I self pollinated the plant was to preserve the AF genetics for this species. Although the parent plant passed away, there is hope for the next generation of AF S. alatas in those seeds as well as in some other crosses I did using this plant. See, I also used the pollen from this AF Sarracenia alata for a couple of crosses with other forms of Sarracenia alata. My goal was to get that AF gene out there in the species one way or another. I know that the subsequent cross between the AF recessives, other AF recessives, and pure AF plants will unlock that AF gene. (By the way, when I say “recessive”, it’s like saying that AF gene is “hidden” or “silent” – you won’t really know it’s there by looking at it.) How’s all of that for some AF plant breeding nerdiness? Even though the main parent plant is no longer with me, a legacy has been left behind that I hope will grow on in future generations.

One. [Lost and … found?]

one

Photo: [Sarracenia courtii AF x leucophylla AF]

Hey everyone, hope you’re having a good week so far!

Yesterday I harvested a seed pod in where I thought there would be no seed at all. Turns out there was only ONE seed. The pod parent was a recent acquisition this year – another clone of an anthocyanin free courtii. Being that it was a recent division and I let it flower this year, it was too stressed to actually properly set seed. The pollen I used was already a few months old as well. It was worth the shot anyway to cross the two plants. I decided it would be a worthwhile photograph to capture the ONE seed in the entire pod.

How much more value I place on that one seed, and the high hopes I have for it. Undoubtedly I will cross the two plants again next year if the opportunity arises. For now, this is what I have to work with for this cross. Just one.  There is a high percentage that it could also of been selfed, which would still yield an anthocyanin free plant, but anyway — I am hopeful. I want that leuco represented in this cross.

So – whats up with the “lost and found” that I referenced in the title??

After I photographed this pod on one desk I moved it back to another desk to prepare to take the seed. When I arrived at the other desk, >DOH!!!< the seed was GONE! I frantically began to scour the floor in between the two desks with a flashlight knowing full well it would be close to impossible to locate the one seed.  I then managed to find a seed under my keyboard.  Is the seed I found the seed? I won’t know until a few months from now. That’s another project to pursue that I am sure you will be reading about in the future.

I wouldn’t have a problem say if 2 or 3 seeds formed of this cross this year, but ONE?  Egads!  Oh well, there’s always next year…