Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul
Beautiful flower! However, I am greatly mystified as to how that cross resulted in offspring with those colors. Digbyana is straight up green/chartreuse and luteola is pretty much the same color scheme with the exception of red and yellow in the throat. Hmm, is there a more colorful variant of luteola out there?
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Digbyana typically doesn't add any color to the cross, so those colors most likely came from luteola, which is a yellow with red flower. However, some redness could have been added from dibyana and you can see red on the back of the petals of many digbyanas. The flash and white balance could have added some extra color, but a lot of flowers have color in them which doesn't get expressed in the parent, but does show up when you cross them with something else.