AG Genetics and Breeding
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Subject: Crossing green with orange?
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From
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Location
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Message
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Date Posted
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Iowegian |
Anamosa, IA BPIowegian@aol.com
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Has anyone tried crossing a green squash with an orange pumpkin? From some of the posts I have read, crosing unrelated lines can result in more "hybrid vigor" and better chances of a real giant. Green and orange would certainly be unrelated. Since our weighoff pays over $2000 for the biggest but only $100 for the prettiest, I'm mainly interested in getting something big. If I can get a seed from a 900+ squash and cross it with good orange genetics, what could I expect from the resulting seeds? Any opinions on this idea would be greatly appreciated.
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12/4/2006 4:25:52 PM
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Doug14 |
Minnesota(dw447@fastmail.fm)
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I've wondered about this as well.
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12/4/2006 9:51:35 PM
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Vineman |
Eugene,OR
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Squash tend to be "heavier" than pumpkins, so it makes a lot of sense. A great example of a spumpkin that has produced very heavy offspring is the 1058 Houghton (which was the reverse cross of the once-world-record 1337 Houghton). The 1058 Houghton was almost green and orange striped. Some of its 1000+ lb offspring have been over 20% heavy.
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12/4/2006 11:57:34 PM
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Dutch Brad |
Netherlands
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I'm thinking about crossing a 1195 Van Kooten (842 Eaton x 960 Perras) with a 1063.5 MacKenzie* this year.
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12/5/2006 3:09:00 AM
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Alexsdad |
Garden State Pumpkins
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More then likely the resulting seeds would be greenies!
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12/5/2006 8:44:47 AM
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Andy W |
Western NY
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I'd be interested to know if the 745* Miller was ever grown. state record squash, and the pollinating plant was the 723 bobier.
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12/5/2006 9:12:05 AM
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Vader |
western PA
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I belive the green coloration in these pumpkins is a ressesive trait. That would mean that the offspring of an orange crossed with a greenie would be orange. Unless the orange had the ressesive allels for the green coloration and were not expressed in the coloration of the orange pumpkin.
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12/5/2006 9:59:02 AM
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Dutch Brad |
Netherlands
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I know Theo Kiewiet (from the Netherlands) grew his Dutch record squash this year off a true orange pumpkin. His squash was green from start to finish. Quinn Werner's 1053* from this year is 848 MacKenzie* x 898 Knauss. That could be an interesting cross. Eddy (ice-man) crossed a 218 Andrews* with a 898 as well a year or two ago. The famous 990 Hebb is also half squash, half pumpkin. It threw both pumpkins and squash.
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12/5/2006 10:35:27 AM
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Dutch Brad |
Netherlands
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I think the 848* MacKenzie would be a good seed to cross into a pumpkin. Remember the 848* has produced heavier progeny than say the 801.5 Stelts or 1230 Daletas.
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12/5/2006 10:41:43 AM
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Dutch Brad |
Netherlands
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The 1119.5 Razo 06 is the 1367.5 Rose x 848*. That should be interesting as well.
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12/5/2006 10:43:55 AM
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Andy W |
Western NY
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the 770 rose was from the 801 stelts, pollinated with a 900* Lyons that threw green.
I grew the 770 this year and it was a nice pumpkin. I pollinated it with my 275* squash (which threw green). the 275* has an odd mix of all squash genetics.
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12/5/2006 12:03:56 PM
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LIpumpkin |
Long Island,New York
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Flip a coin...it could go either way. I don't subscribe to the punnet square/dominant-recessive views on green and orange. I don't think green is green...any more than orange is orange.Is peach orange? Is red-orange and shiney -orange? How bout salmon?...is that orange? Grey green blue and all sorts of shades have been put into one catagory...green. Geneticly I think the greens and greys are related but separate genes. We simplify the color issue with green vs orange then complicate it by making one OK in a pkn contest and one not(until recently). There's a whole lot more going on with colors than we can ever expect to figure out.
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12/5/2006 5:15:58 PM
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gordon |
Utah
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ditto to what glenn said.
Hester has done a fair amount of mixing "pumpkins" and "squash". A few other have too. There are seeds out there... who knows what they will produce.
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12/5/2006 6:06:22 PM
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Total Posts: 13 |
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