| AG Genetics and Breeding 
 
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          | Subject:  Mailing Pollen 
 
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          | From | Location | Message | Date Posted | 
		
            | CountyKid (PECPG) | Picton,ON ([email protected]) | Any one have experiance sending pollen by mail of courier. What is the best method to package and ship. How many days viable. This looks to me like a great way to share top genetics! | 1/15/2005 10:29:39 AM | 
		
            | Big Dave the Hamr | Waquoit Mass | pollen looks pretty sad by noon time on the day the male opens   i think maling it  is a  bad idea   | 1/15/2005 11:05:24 AM | 
		
            | urban jungle | Ljubljana, Slovenia | A great idea and it may work if sending flowers one or two days before they open. | 1/15/2005 12:46:21 PM | 
		
            | docgipe | Montoursville, PA | Lub-a-dub, of this site has worked with saving pollen.  He can give you some pretty straigth answers. | 1/15/2005 5:46:45 PM | 
		
            | Tremor | [email protected] | Tapping the pollen off onto a folded piece of wax paper & then into a dry glass vial is often used for storing pollen. I see no reason it can't be shipped on ice this way. | 1/15/2005 7:18:56 PM | 
		
            | floh | Cologne / Germany | I would send it as a normal flower, tied up not to lose pollen and a small plastic tube (vase) with water attached (the stuff that comes with orchids or a rose in the flower shop). To keep the pollen in the flower until you´ll need it for pollination was the best working method for me so far. | 1/16/2005 6:23:11 AM | 
		
            | AXC | Cornwall UK.(50N 5W)300ft. | I would send it two or three days before opening or even multiple flowers left on the vine and the whole lot sent a week or so in advance the flowers would survive on the sap left in the length of vine. | 1/16/2005 7:38:21 AM | 
		
            | CountyKid (PECPG) | Picton,ON ([email protected]) | If we ship either pollen in waxed paper or whole flowers with the stem in a vial of water, but pack in ice or dry ice will the cold not harm the pollen? | 1/16/2005 10:47:24 AM | 
		
            | urban jungle | Ljubljana, Slovenia | I would send flowers (on a stem) wrapped in a wet paper in a plastic bag. I guess that for two days no ice would be needed.I would like to hear experience on freezing the pollen too..
 
 | 1/16/2005 10:53:48 AM | 
		
            | floh | Cologne / Germany | I had zero luck with frozen pollen last year and I thought my method should work pretty good:http://www.bigpumpkins.com/Diary/DiaryViewOne.asp?eid=21797
 entry 44 to 49. I let the pollen in the box heat up in the sun for 10 minutes before pollination. Yep, it was dry and looked fresh - no results though.
 I still have some boxes in the deep freeze and will try again this year LOL
 | 1/16/2005 4:25:17 PM | 
		
        
          | Total Posts: 10 | Current Server Time: 10/30/2025 9:52:42 PM |