Tutu
Well-Known Member
A question mark for me, hopefully an answer from someone on the forum. This concerns the two, supposedly Amersfoort plants, kept by my mother in the Netherlands. My folks are on holiday and my sister visited the house so I asked her to snap some shots of the tobacco. Once again I find myself comparing the two plants, thinking they look a bit different. One of them looks very much like those Amersfoort plants I have distributed elsewhere, but the second does less. I will post a few pictures below. To get started, I am talking about the plants on pictures 3 to 6 in post #19 and all pictures of plants in post #20.
Again, the plant in front looks pretty much the same as those in Utrecht seen in earlier posts. The seeds used in Utrecht were collected at the Tabaksteeltmuseum on 04-2016. The plants from my mother as well as all the others found in this thread are grown from seeds collected at the Tabaksteeltmuseum on 06-2015. I am not sure whether you all think the two plants on these pictures look alike or are rather different. The one in the back started to bloom very early. At first I thought that this was due to the plants being transplanted extremely late and one coping better with that than the other. Now I am not so sure anymore. Either way, I have told my mum to collect the seedbuds and keep them separate. Growing them next year should give us a decisive answer. However, there are always quite some flying insects in her garden so I am afraid some of it might be cross fertalized. Luckily, Eric in Utrecht has collected seeds from his five plants that all looked alike.
Again, the plant in front looks pretty much the same as those in Utrecht seen in earlier posts. The seeds used in Utrecht were collected at the Tabaksteeltmuseum on 04-2016. The plants from my mother as well as all the others found in this thread are grown from seeds collected at the Tabaksteeltmuseum on 06-2015. I am not sure whether you all think the two plants on these pictures look alike or are rather different. The one in the back started to bloom very early. At first I thought that this was due to the plants being transplanted extremely late and one coping better with that than the other. Now I am not so sure anymore. Either way, I have told my mum to collect the seedbuds and keep them separate. Growing them next year should give us a decisive answer. However, there are always quite some flying insects in her garden so I am afraid some of it might be cross fertalized. Luckily, Eric in Utrecht has collected seeds from his five plants that all looked alike.