Yes, final cull is determined by height, girth and vigor - as long as they meet minimum standards for each. One thing I look at more and more in addition to overall height is the distance between leaf nodes. Sometimes, two will be the same height, but one shows more leaf nodes that are closer together. Pick that one. The ones that are short but with a greater distance between leaf nodes will usually continue to stretch out more than the others do..
One other selection criterion you may use for the final pot is whether it is multiflora or not (if you want one or the other). By the time I put them in their final pot, they usually have started to blossom - sometimes set fruit. Although if you get very much fruit set, they struggle when transplanted.
What Sean described is likely what you will see. I typically move between 1/3 and 1/2 up to the final pot - and then you'll still see what Sean describes. They all gain height slowly. Some reach a certain height and quit getting taller. Some do not. The later the F generation, the more consistency you will see - which is what we are after.
One other selection criterion you may use for the final pot is whether it is multiflora or not (if you want one or the other). By the time I put them in their final pot, they usually have started to blossom - sometimes set fruit. Although if you get very much fruit set, they struggle when transplanted.
What Sean described is likely what you will see. I typically move between 1/3 and 1/2 up to the final pot - and then you'll still see what Sean describes. They all gain height slowly. Some reach a certain height and quit getting taller. Some do not. The later the F generation, the more consistency you will see - which is what we are after.
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