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I stay away of versicolor
Silly question, why not versicolor? Is it too big or does not flower well?
I couldn't say about Epimedium, but there are lots of examples of Lilium hybrids that are sterile (not seed producing) but have fertile pollen, and vice versa.
Thanks Rick, good to know that in theory it's possible, and verifiable examples exist in other genera. It would be interesting to do controlled experiments to validate the proposition with Epimedium.
You are the best person to do these experiments Mark. It would be good to know indeed if some have fertile pollen.Regarding E. x versicolor, they are all indeed very beautiful. I had the chance to see D. Probst's 'Cherry Tart' and 'Strawberry Blush' in 'real life' quite a few years ago. I guess they are not that new...The oldest E. x versicolor cv. 'Versicolor' and 'Cupreum' would be worth pictures shown as well. I regret I don't have any. I find 'Cupreum' to be especially outstanding; I hope they will continued to be propagated.
I'm thinking I should be able to carry out some testing, build a small open wood frame, put window screen netting on it to keep bees out, and keep some potted control epimediums inside (all the same variety), then do crosses on each caged plant with pollen from an assigned sterile variety. If seed even gets produced, that would indicate the efficacy of the pollen from a specific sterile plant.
Gabriela,Perhaps you could enclose the flower heads in a piece of light weight horticultural fleece, tied round the stem with soft twine?
With some (many, most?) genera, a cross of A x B versus B x A usually yield different results. With Lilium, the pollen donor tends to contribute more of the floral characteristics, while the pod parent tends to contribute more to the progeny's overall plant structure.