Help sexing hop

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

marshbrewer

Out on the marshes, wailing at the moon.
Supporting Member
Joined
Jan 4, 2011
Messages
4,944
Reaction score
4,278
Location
East Lindsey, Lincolnshire
I was given this hop plant earlier this year and it's growing well, but I'm not sure from the online descriptions if the plant is female (hurrah!) or male (booo!)

Can any growers advise?

20230820_143533.jpg


20230820_143522.jpg
 
Doesnt look like any of my cascade hops i grow so wrong sex I think.
 
Thanks all. It's a wild hedgerow hop that was rescued when a section of the hedge it was growing in was removed for safety reasons around an electricity pole. So I've no idea what type or variety it is. I'll leave it to do it's thing and see what I end up with.
 
Last edited:
I was given this hop plant earlier this year and it's growing well, but I'm not sure from the online descriptions if the plant is female (hurrah!) or male (booo!)

Can any growers advise?
You've got a baby girl. :D

However those stems look rather red, which suggests you've got one of the redbine family, which are not known for brewing quality...

For comparison, see these pics I took today - I've had a second flush of flowers so you can see them on the same bine as actual cones. The second pic has a good example of a flower in the top left corner, and then in the lower-middle you can see a cone that still has some of the "whiskers" on its tip.

As an aside, if you zoom in on the left edge of the first picture, it has a nice example of the red "pinstripe" you can get on mature Golding stems (whereas the young bines are pure green).

Don't worry if your cones aren't as advanced as these - this is an Amos Early Bird, a Goldings clone that is one of the first of all British hops to ripen. But yep, it's getting to that time when I have to start thinking about green hop beer....

1692655144199.png
1692655834726.png
 
It's a bit late in the year for male flowers but I happened to see this one which was in reasonable condition even if it's not the best photo. You'll see that the male flowers are like little "lanterns" - with definitely no whiskers like the female flowers - in big clusters like a bunch of grapes, whereas you normally only get a couple of female flowers together (although it does vary a lot) :
1692777775142.png
 
Back
Top