They found the plants in New Mexico / Colorado region.
High elevation, extreme hot and cold seasons. I am guessing dry and humid conditions as well.
Only one that I cannot find is multi head hop. I hope a vendor will sell that rhizome. A peach flavored hop. Sounds yummy.have.
Hello Nagmay, I've asked the USDA on numerous occasions for both seed and rhizomes of native North American hops, but they have never sent me anything.
I am trying to collect male plants for breeding purposes. If you could send me some seeds or rhizomes I would greatly appreciate it.
If anybody could send me some male hop rhizomes I would be more then willing send back my hybrid rhizomes in the case that I am successful in crossbreeding the hops.
Current Hops list for 2019 with some late fall entries (moms for eventual breeding program)
Willing to trade for males, dwarf species, or any hop with interesting flavors that are not currently growing here.
These are pictures I took a few minutes ago of one of my Neomexicanus fields. These are all Neomexicanus, no idea how many accessions. 1,2,3,4 and 5th year growth, we have been adding to the collection for 5 years. Our DNA lab will be arriving in November. That should help greatly with identification. Then we plan to brew 2.5 gallon single hop batches using a session IPA recipe with our Zymatic PicoBrew system throughout the winter to determine brewing characteristics of each hop. I'm really curious about the vines that starting starting out Raspberry colored. They are late forming. I haven't seen this before. And my luck is changing, at least in this field. Only one hermaphrodite out of 450. Better odds than last year.
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I moved from Carlsbad(elev 3100') to Silver City (elev 6200') and brought all my hops crowns with me-mostly Cascade, Centennial and Magnum but I also had 2 Neo's. The soil around here is not suitable, even though the climate is. Everything I've planted here has died within a month, including about 60 hops crowns. So now I have to decide whether to take a small piece of our property and totally rework the soil from scratch to grow some hops.The top 2 pictures above are NEO's from my place up north. The bottom 2 pictures are from the Willow Creeks in Las Cruces.
Hopefully next year will be better as I learn more about how to grow these
I dug holes for each of my 20 hop rhizomes and plants. I used bagged steer manure from Lowes and mixed it with mulch from under the cedar and pinion trees on my property and soil from the holes I dug. 4 out of 16 rhizomes did not come up. My mixture was approximately 50%manure, 25% mulch from under cedar trees and pinion pines and 25% local soil.I moved from Carlsbad(elev 3100') to Silver City (elev 6200') and brought all my hops crowns with me-mostly Cascade, Centennial and Magnum but I also had 2 Neo's. The soil around here is not suitable, even though the climate is. Everything I've planted here has died within a month, including about 60 hops crowns. So now I have to decide whether to take a small piece of our property and totally rework the soil from scratch to grow some hops.
That's what I use for my garden, but hops rhyzomes grow enormous. I have a pic somewhere of a 5 year old Cascade that completely fills an adult sized lawn chair. That's not the answer for 40 or 50 hops plants.^^^Thought about raised beds?