When you are saying 'best seed', do you mean:
A. Getting a seed pod with viable seed?
B. Getting the highest quality plant?
First of all, I never pollinate a first time bloomer. In the past, I have killed young plants by setting a seed pod on them.
On Cattleyas I typically set only a single pod of each cross. On Vandas & Cymbidium, I usually try two (if both take, then I remove one of them).
If a plant is large enough, I might try multiple crosses. This past season, I had one Cattleya carry pods of three different crosses.
Finally, with the number of seeds produced by orchids (ranging from 2-300, up to two or three million in some Cattleyas), there is no need to produce more than a single pod.
However, the outcome of sexual (seed) reproduction is a total lottery, so you will need to grow a large number of plants to maturity to look for the high quality plant you are hoping for.
__________________
Kim (Fair Orchids)
Founder of SPCOP (Society to Prevention of Cruelty to Orchid People), with the goal of barring the taxonomists from tinkering with established genera!
I am neither a 'lumper' nor a 'splitter', but I refuse to re-write millions of labels.
Last edited by Fairorchids; 06-27-2021 at 09:46 AM..
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