Throughout the spring, Gwivelle had been cultivating new rice varieties in the new experimental fields.
Modern breeding techniques could fail, so many varieties had numbers behind them, and some of these numbers indicated the generation of the cultivated variety.
If luck wasn't on your side, it was normal to fail a dozen or more times.
Thus, it was best to cultivate in multiple experimental points at once, using quantity to trigger a qualitative change, cultivating one hundred batches of rice seeds at a time—there were bound to be successes.
After all, failure is the mother of success.
But Gwivelle had no possibility of failure.
Even if she did fail, it was only because it did not achieve the expected effects.
For instance, she couldn't directly cultivate a primitive rice variety into a supreme rice variety; that would definitely result in failure.