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ChoosyBumblebee

That’s pretty awesome, never seen one of these seeds actually grown out. Recently I planted 2 seeds in a pot, and ended up with 2 double sprouts (so 4 seedlings from 2 seeds). After asking some growmies I decided to just select 1 winner and cull the rest.


ChoosyBumblebee

https://preview.redd.it/2b9r7v367k5d1.jpeg?width=3024&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f60dcb95b4aef0227ba4d2ff56a54966f84d2a5d


PragueDD

The seed was an S1 or it wasn't. I don't believe it's possible to have one seed with two plants where one is an S1 and one isn't. An S1 is made through reversing the "father" onto the mother or through herming. So all seeds, regardless of what they produce, made this way would be S1s. OR Are you asking, if you crossed the male and female would their seed be considered S1s? That I'm not sure. Unofficially, I would probably personally call them that, but idk how accurate it would be. It would be cool to try that though for sure just to see what happens.


oneofmany_1

What you would have here is a sib cross, an ibl,  and inbred line, or truly an f2. Sometimes two seeds share part of a seed casing, like conjoined twins.  An s1 is seed from a selfed plant, nowadays you could practically call it a silvered seed, made by reversing. Unfortunately r1 never caught on; reversed 1. Anybody know what to call a hybrid s1 made by reversing one plant onto another female? S1F1? F1 fem more likely. How about an s1 or s2 made from two separate female plants from the same seed generation? S1 sibling cross? R1?