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#1
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Good for you Mick I also love my species,but don't hate hybrids as long as
they have a name.I don't go for NOIDS !I have a few from my first orchids I got but you learn & progress as the little suckers draw you in!! PS no need for a dig at us brits! -- Thanks Keith,England,UK. "Mick Fournier" wrote in message ... Keith, There is still a few hybrids left in the catalog... there used to be 60 different hybrid selections, but not now. Once these last few remaining ones are gone I will be rid of hybrids altogether. I have not made a new hybrid cross in 4 years actually. Mick |
#2
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keith ;-) wrote:
Good for you Mick I also love my species,but don't hate hybrids as long as they have a name.I don't go for NOIDS !I have a few from my first orchids I got but you learn & progress as the little suckers draw you in!! PS no need for a dig at us brits! But of course those line bred species cattleyas are about as close to the 'original species' as any hybrid. *grin* After a dozen generations in captivity they probably wouldn't survive 10 minutes in the native habitat. Just poking a stick into the hornet nest... -- Rob's Rules: http://littlefrogfarm.com 1) There is always room for one more orchid 2) There is always room for two more orchids 2a) See rule 1 3) When one has insufficient credit to obtain more orchids, obtain more credit |
#3
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Rob,
I beg your pardon... did you really just say (or insinuate) on this public forum in front of thousands of viewers/my_customers that the Cattleya species I sell on my website are not species and as far from being a species as any hybrid? Just say yes or no. Mick ============================= "Rob Halgren" wrote in message ... keith ;-) wrote: Good for you Mick I also love my species,but don't hate hybrids as long as they have a name.I don't go for NOIDS !I have a few from my first orchids I got but you learn & progress as the little suckers draw you in!! PS no need for a dig at us brits! But of course those line bred species cattleyas are about as close to the 'original species' as any hybrid. *grin* After a dozen generations in captivity they probably wouldn't survive 10 minutes in the native habitat. Just poking a stick into the hornet nest... -- Rob's Rules: http://littlefrogfarm.com 1) There is always room for one more orchid 2) There is always room for two more orchids 2a) See rule 1 3) When one has insufficient credit to obtain more orchids, obtain more credit |
#4
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It would really suck to find out you hated species as much as you hate
hybrids. oh well "Mick Fournier" wrote in message . .. Rob, I beg your pardon... did you really just say (or insinuate) on this public forum in front of thousands of viewers/my_customers that the Cattleya species I sell on my website are not species and as far from being a species as any hybrid? Just say yes or no. Mick ============================= "Rob Halgren" wrote in message ... keith ;-) wrote: Good for you Mick I also love my species,but don't hate hybrids as long as they have a name.I don't go for NOIDS !I have a few from my first orchids I got but you learn & progress as the little suckers draw you in!! PS no need for a dig at us brits! But of course those line bred species cattleyas are about as close to the 'original species' as any hybrid. *grin* After a dozen generations in captivity they probably wouldn't survive 10 minutes in the native habitat. Just poking a stick into the hornet nest... -- Rob's Rules: http://littlefrogfarm.com 1) There is always room for one more orchid 2) There is always room for two more orchids 2a) See rule 1 3) When one has insufficient credit to obtain more orchids, obtain more credit |
#5
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Pat,
My whole business is devoted to preserving and perpetuating the absolute best of species. Cattleya species are especially important to me... it is hard for me for to adequately express just how upset I am at this moment. I am waiting patiently right here for Rob Halgren to respond to my question. Mick ============================= "Pat Brennan" wrote in message ... It would really suck to find out you hated species as much as you hate hybrids. oh well "Mick Fournier" wrote in message . .. Rob, I beg your pardon... did you really just say (or insinuate) on this public forum in front of thousands of viewers/my_customers that the Cattleya species I sell on my website are not species and as far from being a species as any hybrid? Just say yes or no. Mick ============================= "Rob Halgren" wrote in message ... keith ;-) wrote: Good for you Mick I also love my species,but don't hate hybrids as long as they have a name.I don't go for NOIDS !I have a few from my first orchids I got but you learn & progress as the little suckers draw you in!! PS no need for a dig at us brits! But of course those line bred species cattleyas are about as close to the 'original species' as any hybrid. *grin* After a dozen generations in captivity they probably wouldn't survive 10 minutes in the native habitat. Just poking a stick into the hornet nest... -- Rob's Rules: http://littlefrogfarm.com 1) There is always room for one more orchid 2) There is always room for two more orchids 2a) See rule 1 3) When one has insufficient credit to obtain more orchids, obtain more credit |
#6
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Mick Fournier wrote:
Pat, My whole business is devoted to preserving and perpetuating the absolute best of species. Cattleya species are especially important to me... it is hard for me for to adequately express just how upset I am at this moment. I am waiting patiently right here for Rob Halgren to respond to my question. Oh Mick, you know I like to push buttons. I must have found one. I don't know about your Cattleya species, or what your breeding program is like. And devoting your life to cattleya species is an admirable thing, more people should be as committed to various orchid genera. But, my point was that there has been a lot of line breeding in cattleyas (and phalaenopsis, and paphiopedilum, and anything else that is worth having). It is my contention, however, that line breeding of any species leads to results that are not typical of a wild type population. In fact, due to abnormal selection pressures (big, flat, color), you end up with a final product that can be very distant from the original species. Heck, right now I have two Paph sukhakulii that have flowers that are twice as big as anything you would find in the jungle, and far better colored. And I love them to death. But they don't represent the species all that well. Now, is this good or bad? Depends. From a horticultural perspective, probably good. Line breeding intensifies desirable characteristics. It is certainly true that (for example) the latest generation Cattleya walkeriana are far bigger and better formed than anything you would find in a jungle. They are easier to grow, as well. This all leads to increased popularity, which is excellent. From a conservation perspective, line breeding is probably a very bad thing. We lose characteristics (desirable or not) that we will never get back. Once you breed an allele out of a population you can't recover it. We might need that allele some day. Bananas (obviously they are not orchids) have this problem, those yellow Cavendish bananas that everybody buys at the supermarket are highly prone to a specific disease that is spreading like wildfire. But every banana plantation on the planet is planting an exact copy of the Cavendish banana. So there isn't the genetic diversity out there to select a resistant clone. Bananas are doomed!!! At least the ones we love to eat. Without some serious genetic modifications, anyway (already in progress, have no fear). But Mick, before your aorta pops, I'm not making a value judgment about your plants. Any species orchid is worth keeping, line bred or not. And the highly selected ones enhance the popularity of the species, which is always good. But, from a purely genetic point of view, it is probably good to also keep as many of the 'less desirable' clones as possible, or at least the ones that represent as much of the natural diversity as possible. -- Rob's Rules: http://littlefrogfarm.com 1) There is always room for one more orchid 2) There is always room for two more orchids 2a) See rule 1 3) When one has insufficient credit to obtain more orchids, obtain more credit |
#7
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On Tue, 05 Apr 2005 10:36:03 -0400, Rob Halgren
wrote: Mick Fournier wrote: Pat, My whole business is devoted to preserving and perpetuating the absolute best of species. Cattleya species are especially important to me... it is hard for me for to adequately express just how upset I am at this moment. Oh Mick, you know I like to push buttons. I must have found one. I don't know about your Cattleya species, or what your breeding program is like. And devoting your life to cattleya species is an admirable thing, more people should be as committed to various orchid genera. But, my point was that there has been a lot of line breeding in cattleyas (and phalaenopsis, and paphiopedilum, and anything else that is worth having). It is my contention, however, that line breeding of any species leads to results that are not typical of a wild type population. In fact, due to abnormal selection pressures (big, flat, color), you end up with a final product that can be very distant from the original species. Heck, right now I have two Paph sukhakulii that have flowers that are twice as big as anything you would find in the jungle, and far better colored. And I love them to death. But they don't represent the species all that well. But Mick, before your aorta pops, I'm not making a value judgment about your plants. Any species orchid is worth keeping, line bred or not. And the highly selected ones enhance the popularity of the species, which is always good. But, from a purely genetic point of view, it is probably good to also keep as many of the 'less desirable' clones as possible, or at least the ones that represent as much of the natural diversity as possible. Ok - I agree with the theory Rob is talking about. But I also know that we are not the experts on what is or is not lost in this type of breeding. Not long ago it was reported that a pair that both displayed the recessive (desired) characteristic were breed and the resulting population had 1/4 or 1/3 that reverted to the 'absent' dominant character. This character had been "breed out" of the parents and should not have been available to surface. Mother Nature still has the top hand in all of this. When we breed to intensify color or any other characteristic we are in effect hybridizing to create a more beautiful species. Yes, I would do it if I could. It is the nature of the beast (man) to selective breed what he wants to see in his plants. As long as we say species x species is still species we are going to 'beautify' the species. Heck, I would love a C. aurantiaca that did not self before I could enjoy the color and line. I am all for species that carry the desirable characteristics. SuE http://orchids.legolas.org/gallery/albums.php |
#8
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Rob,
Toothpick, toothpick... wake up, arise. Time to go to work again. Mick |
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