Absolutely not.Newb question from a somewhat advanced grower. If I cross pollinate two strains to get an F1 then Reverse the F1 and pollinate it with itself will this S1 then be a copy of the F1? Is this a good way of producing hybridised genetics?
Thanks T gonna try and have a go at making fems. Just going to try keeping it simple.If you're trying to make fems and only have 10 seeds, pop 3 seeds, attempt to reverse those 3 plants and hope one is a female and discard the males. Collect the pollen and pop the other 7 seeds. Now you have pollen and a newly flowering females. Pollinate 2 or so weeks after signs of flower.
Making regular seeds, just select the best looking male and let it go to town. You can collect pollen from the male and pollinate a branch from every female.
Choose the best quality buds to proceed with those seeds
Thanks Toad yeah the seeds are onyx auto from short stuff. As you say i think if i can isolate branches and try to be careful with the pollen i could possible produce fem and reg seeds on different branches. Could be cool to have this option in the future not to have to keep in breeding. I will try to save the pollen from a male and from a selfied female then as you say get a viable female on the next round and pollinate a few branches with each pollen.If you bought your Autoflower seeds from reputable dealer , and have decent genetics..They should be more than stable for what your are trying to do..assuming f3-f6 anyway...
All depends on your long term goal?
My suggestion: Stagger your grow (2waves)..with the intention of producing fem seed from most of your females...and aome reg seed
Strategy: 1. plant 5 beans to begin with..Intention:To be reasonably sure you'll have at least one male and one female for genetic retention...2. A week and a half to two weeks later pop the other 5 beans....(It will Take a bit of time for the female to sprout balls once you have started spraying with collodial silver).....depending on strain you will need to begin spraying the females at the first sign of flowering approx 3rd-5th week
By doing a staggered start..you have an excellent chance a female from the first wave is producing plenty of "feminized" pollen by the time the second wave begins producing pistils..You should be able to pollenate the last of the pistils from the first wave too, but will have missed some pollenation as some pistils from that initial wave would have already deteriorated by the time the plant Produced fem pollen. 3. Separate the male(s) once light flipped and
Identified...4. Mark a branch or two on each of the females using a twist tie..and lightly dust with male pollen using a childs paint brush...dusting every day for a good 3 days...(these will be breeders to maintain the line for the future)...lightly mist the pollenated branches with water to kill stray
Pollen if you so desire...I would buy some of those organic gel caps from the organic store to save and freeze some pollen...mix pollen with baking flour (desiccant) 1:10 before putting in gelcap. You can destroy males after
.
Once the the females start producing feminized pollen you can pretty much
Open pollenate (save and freeze some of this pollen too)...Those branches dusted with male pollen just needed to provide some males...If a little feminized pollen created a slightly higher ratio of females on those branches..no big deal .
That should give you a good foundation of seed..Tip: dont spray collodial silver on too many branches as it reduces the number of available pistils to be pollenated..reducing potential seed count..you don't need that much pollen.
Just my 2-cents
Cheers
Toad
If
What is an S1 and F1?Newb question from a somewhat advanced grower. If I cross pollinate two strains to get an F1 then Reverse the F1 and pollinate it with itself will this S1 then be a copy of the F1? Is this a good way of producing hybridised genetics?
S1 is the first generation offspring of a reversed female. F1 refers to the first generation of plants bred through male female lineage. The first is induced by using chemicals or stress to make a female plant produce male parts whilst the latter is two plants doing what they would do in natureWhat is an S1 and F1?
Yeah on reflection this sounds like the better plan. I am restricted to 0 but obviously the less the better. Have you cross bred in this way before? i would have thought there would be a lot of varience in the feminised seeds you produced?You could also take two females of different auto strains and cross them, for a bunch of feminized f1's. I would do this if you are restricted by plant count, or if you are growing so many that you can't be bothered to cull males, though it is still wise to closely inspect each plant to avoid pollination from hermies.
So a reversed female is a male plant that was made into a female and F1 are first generations bred thru hermaphrodite plants?S1 is the first generation offspring of a reversed female. F1 refers to the first generation of plants bred through male female lineage. The first is induced by using chemicals or stress to make a female plant produce male parts whilst the latter is two plants doing what they would do in nature
I just use Collodial as I can make it myself which is quite easy.Thanks Toad yeah the seeds are onyx auto from short stuff. As you say i think if i can isolate branches and try to be careful with the pollen i could possible produce fem and reg seeds on different branches. Could be cool to have this option in the future not to have to keep in breeding. I will try to save the pollen from a male and from a selfied female then as you say get a viable female on the next round and pollinate a few branches with each pollen.
Ive also got some other auto fem seeds (different genetics) so was considering using some of the pollen on these as well. Not sure how stable the resulting seeds would be from this
Just as a side do you have any experince using Silver Thiosulphate over collodial? On other forums its been touted as being quicker and more effective.
LolSo a reversed female is a male plant that was made into a female and F1 are first generations bred thru hermaphrodite plants?
I've used both with success but I use STS as it requires less spraying and is more reliable since you're measuring a specific amount of chemicals for the required strength. Colloidal silver requires much more spraying and some have difficulties with it due to the concentration not being strong enough. If you go the Colloidal silver method you're better off making it yourself rather than buying a premade product where the stated concentration can be completely wrong and you could end up spraying a weak solution that doesn't reverse the plant.Just as a side do you have any experince using Silver Thiosulphate over collodial? On other forums its been touted as being quicker and more effective.
CS is a waste of time! Spray until the leaves are silver lolI've used both with success but I use STS as it requires less spraying and is more reliable since you're measuring a specific amount of chemicals for the required strength. Colloidal silver requires much more spraying and some have difficulties with it due to the concentration not being strong enough. If you go the Colloidal silver method you're better off making it yourself rather than buying a premade product where the stated concentration can be completely wrong and you could end up spraying a weak solution that doesn't reverse the plant.
Good luck