Omicron,
Many thanks for taking the time to explain. I'm grokking 99% of what you said and have done most of it, but it's the last and absolutely critical 1% that still has me flummoxed.
*points finger at self* Guilty as charged.
And there's the problem. I never learned to breed traits in bees the proper/"old" way before ExtraBees. I tried, but failed. I spent 2 hours reading up on the rules of Mendelian inheritence and scouring the forums looking for advice, but that didn't help much. Was still flummoxed. If it wasn't for ExtraBees machines, I would have given up on bees a long ago.
Whoa. Very good info. Where can I find this ? My tree breeding endeavors in the past have been an exercise in blind dice rolling.
I'm with you so far. In fact, I'm with you for 99% of what you've very nicely explained. However...
Yeah, I've tried that. I've looked at maybe hundreds of saplings, have known exactly what traits to look for, but I don't know where to look for them at. In other words, I don't know how to compare two saplings that have the same traits, but one of them has them in red, the other blue, one of them has the trait I want in the left column, the other in the right column. This is and has always been the mystery to me.
Many thanks for taking the time to explain this.
Many thanks for taking the time to explain. I'm grokking 99% of what you said and have done most of it, but it's the last and absolutely critical 1% that still has me flummoxed.
...(discounting the "Who cares about breeding I just overwrite everything with my serums" approach of Binnie's Mods).
*points finger at self* Guilty as charged.
Of course, there's the thing with dominant and recessive, but that works exactly the same as it does with bees.
And there's the problem. I never learned to breed traits in bees the proper/"old" way before ExtraBees. I tried, but failed. I spent 2 hours reading up on the rules of Mendelian inheritence and scouring the forums looking for advice, but that didn't help much. Was still flummoxed. If it wasn't for ExtraBees machines, I would have given up on bees a long ago.
...the apple oak species trait is recessive and the willow isn't
Whoa. Very good info. Where can I find this ? My tree breeding endeavors in the past have been an exercise in blind dice rolling.
... sapling drop chance of the apple oak, size of the willow, sappiness of the willow.
I'm with you so far. In fact, I'm with you for 99% of what you've very nicely explained. However...
You only need to watch for these three traits.
Yeah, I've tried that. I've looked at maybe hundreds of saplings, have known exactly what traits to look for, but I don't know where to look for them at. In other words, I don't know how to compare two saplings that have the same traits, but one of them has them in red, the other blue, one of them has the trait I want in the left column, the other in the right column. This is and has always been the mystery to me.
Many thanks for taking the time to explain this.