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Produce => Edible Plants => Topic started by: small on August 11, 2015, 16:15:44

Title: pea crossing question
Post by: small on August 11, 2015, 16:15:44
I've grown ordinary peas and sugar peas close together this year. I would like to save some seed from both, but will they have cross pollinated? I know there are some pea experts on here, can one of you advise please?
Title: Re: pea crossing question
Post by: galina on August 11, 2015, 18:21:44
No problem Small, the chance of crossing is minimal  :sunny:

Go right ahead and save those seeds  :wave:
Title: Re: pea crossing question
Post by: small on August 11, 2015, 22:47:03
Brilliant, thanks Galina! I've always saved beans, but never tried peas, I'll give it a go. The list of things I am managing to save seed from is growing, not that I'll ever reach self-sufficency in that, I wouldn't waste a precious cauliflower by letting it run on...
Title: Re: pea crossing question
Post by: Silverleaf on August 12, 2015, 00:03:10
Even worse, with cauliflowers (like all brassicas) you need to waste a bare minimum of twenty of them!

Galina's right, you're fine to save seeds as peas only extremely rarely cross.
Title: Re: pea crossing question
Post by: small on August 12, 2015, 16:35:42
thanks, Silverleaf, I knew you experts would know.....so if you want to try crossing pea varieties, you have to faff around hand pollinating and stuff? I'd never have the patience!
Title: Re: pea crossing question
Post by: galina on August 12, 2015, 16:43:04
Quote from: small on August 12, 2015, 16:35:42
thanks, Silverleaf, I knew you experts would know.....so if you want to try crossing pea varieties, you have to faff around hand pollinating and stuff? I'd never have the patience!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pq7-JGRmFBc 


just in case 
:tongue3:

:wave:
Title: Re: pea crossing question
Post by: Silverleaf on August 12, 2015, 21:20:03
Quote from: small on August 12, 2015, 16:35:42
thanks, Silverleaf, I knew you experts would know.....so if you want to try crossing pea varieties, you have to faff around hand pollinating and stuff? I'd never have the patience!

Honestly, once you've learned how to do it it's really easy and quick. I use a scalpel and it takes less that 5 minutes. A steady hand does help though!
Title: Re: pea crossing question
Post by: Jayb on August 15, 2015, 07:13:41
Quoteyou have to faff around hand pollinating and stuff? I'd never have the patience!

It's not too much of a faff, especially if you are only doing a few.
Interesting video, thanks Galina. Must admit I don't use a scalpel and only sometimes a tweezers, I find using my fingernail to take the male bits off works well.
Title: Re: pea crossing question
Post by: galina on August 15, 2015, 07:30:20
I do it pretty much like the video, except that I take my glasses off.  I am shortsighted and see much better close up without them.  Often people use headband magnifier glasses (especially the older folk) to cross peas.  The trickiest part is to mark the hand pollinated flower afterwards.  I just use colour coded sowing threads, a jewellery tag is fairly heavy for a brittle pea flower and deteriorates in rain.

I like the filming technique in the video.  Every step is shown twice, once as it is performed and a second time close up.   :wave: