khurtekant posted in the group Species Peonies International Network (SPIN)
For those that reside in the USA, this company sells wild-collected seeds of P. brownii. Usually not easy to find, so if you’d like to try your hand at it… A pity they don’t sell their seeds abroad, but given the phytosanitary regulations and costs it’s understandable.
https://www.butterfieldseeds.com/seeds/p/browns-peonyEven better is part two: the growing field with again the name plates followed by shots of the plants in the field. You can perfectly see which ones stand up better than others, have prettier flowers, are more floriferous, have open or closed buds and so on… The last part is the highlight: the area where @bobjohnson his seedlings are propagated.…Read More
6 CommentsThe seedling being referred to is at 12:59 in this video. The flowers are attractive, but the plant habit is probably the very best of any seedling I’ve grown in all my years of hybridizing. Terrifically strong stems on a compact bush. It does serve to illustrate what’s possible with modern hybrids, as far as plant habit is concerned, and just…Read More
Is this plant fertil ? Did you make some pollination with it? If the plant is perfect, it’s only maybe the color? They miss nothing I think. But as a cut flower more interesting than as a Garden plant?
I’m not sure if it has pollen or not, as it is not growing at my house. Many of these double-flowered plants will have a little pollen, but you really have to search for it. Often these doubles do not have carpals either, so you have to use the pollen if you want its genetics. Here’s a photo of this plant that I took in 2022, that shows its…Read More
A short update one temperature treatments for germination of peony seeds. As was noted a constant temperature was better than fluctuating temperatures. The seeds which went into the warm treatment later did show a difference in that the one that were left in my house at some 22-23°C had hardly made any progress and showed as good as no…Read More
khurtekant wrote a new post
5 CommentsThanks Koen, I have also better results when I placed my seeds in constant temprature in my ‘home made’ climate chamber. In the past I did some trials with gibberellin treatments, do you have experience with this treatments?
Yes. But I’ll have to admit that I haven’t done a decent trial comparing seeds treated with GA3 and a control group. When soaking the seeds 24-48 hours prior to the warm treatment in vermiculite, the water has a concentration of 200 ppm (parts per million) GA3. Given the standard weight and concentration of GA3 tablets (10 gr tablets, 10% active ingredient), there is normally 1 gram of pure GA3 in them each time. Thus you need 1 tablet for 5 litres of water. (5 litres = 5 kg = 5,000 grammes and 1 gram GA3 is thus a concentration of 1/5000 or 200/1.000.000 if you convert, thus 200 ppm or mg). I can see you’re a member in the hybridizer’s corner, have a look at the paper: Diversity of Treatments in Overcoming Morphophysiological Dormancy of Paeonia peregrina Mill. Seeds. In it several treatments with differing concentrations of GA3 have been tried and 200 ppm (=mg) seemed to give the best result. Given those results I simply used that concentration and then forgot to make a control to see if it also the best solution for other species/crosses than P. peregrina, but I reckon there won’t be too much of a difference.
An interesting article for commercial growers of peony cut flowers:
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This one shows the seedlings grown at Adelman’s