| AG Genetics and Breeding 
 
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          | Subject:  1068 x 998 or 998 x 1068  ? 
 
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          | From | Location | Message | Date Posted | 
		
            | Andy H | Brooklyn Corner, Nova Scotia | If you had to choose one of these crosses to plant, which one you you go for and why. Thanks. | 5/3/2008 7:54:45 AM | 
		
            | Andy H | Brooklyn Corner, Nova Scotia | I'm only asking because I'm torn between two plants that appear more or less equal in every way. I suppose I could plant both at opposite ends of the patch and see which performs best.  | 5/3/2008 10:47:07 AM | 
		
            | hoots dirt (Mark) | Farmville, Virginia ([email protected]) | Flip a coin. Both of these seeds have proven to be awesome as either females or pollinators. | 5/3/2008 12:41:51 PM | 
		
            | Doug14 | Minnesota([email protected]) | Andy,If you can only grow one, planting at opposite ends of the patch sounds like a good idea. It will give insurance in case of an unmanageable double/flat vine, or unforseen plant damage.
 | 5/3/2008 3:30:36 PM | 
		
            | Urban Farmer (Frantz) | No Place Special | you can plant them side by side 2 ft apart and cull one later keeping the healthier stronger plant.  I always double plant my hills. | 5/3/2008 4:21:34 PM | 
		
            | Andy H | Brooklyn Corner, Nova Scotia | Thanks for the advice. I'll plant them both and let them fight it out.  | 5/3/2008 5:54:03 PM | 
		
            | Tremor | [email protected] | I would evaluate how each of the parents fruit did. Just picking two genetic sets is a crap shoot until someone actually grows the seed out. | 5/3/2008 11:33:06 PM | 
		
            | Doug14 | Minnesota([email protected]) | Steve(Tremor makes a good point). How did the parents do? Shape, weight, heaviness to the chart, internal/external flaws, etc. | 5/4/2008 12:04:44 AM | 
		
        
          | Total Posts: 8 | Current Server Time: 10/31/2025 9:14:06 AM |