Pollen came from a common pachanoi, the kind that is widespread, fast growing, fairly hardy but containing rather low amounts of mescaline. This plant has a white flower.
The maternal plant is a grandiflorus type named for a region in Argentinia. This plants has a yellow flower.
The flowers of the parent cross: ( yellow X white ) = ?
The stems are obscured, but here are five f1 plants flowering.
Two salmon pink
Two yellow
And one (maybe two) red with cream/white centers
The sample is too small to make it useful statistically, but we can at the least infer that we have at least three flower colors, and over the years these are the only colors witnessed on these hybrids... So far...
YY WW would f1 as YW, one would expect some uniformity perhaps?
If it was however YY Ww then there would be YW and Yw, to use perhaps overly simple thinking.... But that would yield a 1:1 population ratio. So what if it is Yy Ww? Then it would be YW yW Yw yw... 1:1:1:1
But perhaps Y is a dominant yellow, and y is red and is recessive to Y. Then W is white actively and w is white passively...
So then YW is yellow as is Yw.
yW is pink or salmon (red and white mixed)
Then yw is red (with white or lighter centers) the passive white being covered by the red
Then hypothetically this could be a 2:1:1 yellow:salmon:red...
I am of the opinion that the pachanoi clone in this case is heterozygous and I believe it to be a cross between pachanoi and cuzcoensis with a dominant short spine allele covering up another allele for long central spines. As far as I know I am the only one who thinks this... So don't pay it too much attention, until I start pointing out the spine traits of the f2 offspring of this same cross...if I decide to.
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