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Replying to Avatar 𝔼𝕣π•ͺπ•Ÿ 𝔹𝕣𝕒𝕔𝕔𝕠

I’m dedicated to the idea of breeding up my own landraces of different crops; it’s one of the most exciting things to me about homesteading. Joseph Lofthouse is an inspiration.

I’m really interested to hear from anyone who’s done this with corn. I’m aware that the different colors of individual kernels on an ear reflect genetic differences, but do they also ripen at different times, or is that controlled by the mother plant? Somehow my intuition based on seeing landrace corn and multicolored corn would be the kernels do NOT ripen at different times, but I’d like to ask people with more experience.

#corn #Zea #permaculture #permies #foodsecurity #plantbreeding #landrace #gardening #garden #homestead #farm #grownostr nostr:note1t505mdqkdkr4mpkxhvyqdgs56ramy0eh3gcyjs3sudkd3mdgv6wsvwycpw

6d
Deleted Account 1y ago

i've havn't noticed kernals ripening at different times. my interests are in breeding a flint corn that drys down before the heavy fall rains that has excellent flavor. I have noticed dry down times vary. in gardening there are always so many variables it is hard to discern which one is causing which thing to "act" in a certain way.

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