Rendered at 18:50:22 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Cloudflare Workers.
addaon 17 hours ago [-]
> due to a dominant recessive gene for pigment
I assume this should be "a double recessive gene"? Although looks like a lot of blueberry varieties are not diploid, so...
metalman 10 hours ago [-]
those are not blueberries, nor are
"high bush" in the first place, watery no flavor muck. Get you into bear country and
pick sun warmed blueberries with the white blush still on them, just one, will learn you something.
same with strawberries, to find a natural oceanside windswept 1/2" tall carpet of wild strawberries is to know that there are things no amount of money or human endevour can contrive.
fnord77 17 hours ago [-]
blueberries without the healthy and beneficial pigment/flavonoids
what a dumb idea
AlotOfReading 16 hours ago [-]
I have a bush of pink blueberries, and I greatly prefer them to the "blue" ones I've also planted. It's a novelty for guests and a nice seasonal treat. Minmaxing the nutritional content of every bit of fruit doesn't seem like a fun way to live.
I assume this should be "a double recessive gene"? Although looks like a lot of blueberry varieties are not diploid, so...
what a dumb idea