Like I said:
In due time.
I already have about 30 different kinds of whole leaf cones to brew with in the meanwhile, though. Only had the chance to try a few so far, I should get back to my brews!
Like I said:
The dwarf hops that are out there are proprietary and unavailable. True dwarf hops have a single recessive gene that controls height, but you could also breed for a "dwarf-stature" with quantitative genetics.
Also, yes, many conventional varieties can be grown on a short trellis but the subsequent decrease in overall yield and increased labor costs don't lend to sustainable production.
You'd be better off growing on a normal trellis with a dwarf variety than a conventional variety on a short trellis.
Except the Wye College program no longer exists...I believe it **** down in 2009....and the breeder and all its germplasm went into private industry. I don't know all the specifics, but you probably won't find either outside of the UK, probably for a number of reasons.
I would like to think that hellfire and brimstone wouldn't be leashed upon anyone for growing F1s, but there are probably a lot of reasons why they might anyways.
Also, the likelihood of getting what you want with 5 seed from Summit hops is...limited. It's all a numbers game, you know that.
Just saying...
Are they? Tomahawk[emoji768] seems private, but the other two don't, from a very quick search. I can easily find rhizomes for Columbus and Zeus, but I cannot for Tomahawk.
This source gives an individual as a source for Tomahawk, and not a public institution: https://ychhops.com/varieties/tomahawk-brand-f10-cv
So are they really an example of such a thing, because it looks to me like Columbus and Zeus were and remain public, while Tomahawk is and always was private? This does predate my interest in hops, though.
And I already started, got many seedlings already.
If anyone has any Summit hops seeds, though, I'd be interested in having some mailed. The AHDA says they don't even plan on continuing Summit anyways... they may as well just start selling the rhizomes to the public.
Should be able to tell from the internode distance, no?