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atm anything priced in dollars are cheap to europeans. the exchange rate is good. it means half price to the seeds i bought for this season, even though i looked for a european distributor of their seeds. in the end i bought lots of seeds, but only one or two numex varieties.
also for next year im going to plant some rocoto`s, and hopefully i will find a few more to add to the list before its time to plant. i honestly just blew my whole chili seed cash buying lots of seeds for next year, but the shop i bought from didnt have everything i really wanted, so i plan to do some aditional shopping later, specially for super hot rocotos.
atm im loving the growth of the baccatums in my garden outside. they have just started flowering, so i got a lot of time left before i can test any of the chilis, but the season is long, and im sure withing the coming months i will have plenty of those chilis also
at the moment im doing chili sauces with my cayennes. they are very productive... i gotto pick atleast 50+ chilis every 2 days, if not even more sometimes. soon i have harvested several kilos allready only drawback is i find the cayennes a bit soft, so i think i will have to mix in some hotter chilis into the sauce mixes later on. i got a few really hot ones, and since they are about 10 times stronger than a cayenne, i hope to boost the heat a bit more
the sauces are hot as hell for normal ppl hehe but i've gotten too used to the heat allready. i easilly snack 4-5 cayenne chilis with every meal on the side of the chili-sauces. its just so tasty.
Ty bone
The cayenne is the classic one: tasty both fresh and dried and a mass producer!
Thinking of ordering some with a little more hot-kick for the next year though like the ring of fire or the super-chilli
i recieved today my chili seeds for next year! this time i can plant them in VERY good time hehehe i think i will plant in a few months or so..
the cheap bastard at the shop only gifted me one pack even though i spent almost 100 bucks! anyway, glad i got the pack but for next time i will order in a few different shops to get extra much free seeds hehe
anyway, all my late planted chili kinds are starting to flower and fruit now, so i will finally get good harvests of all of them i think.
i got one unknown kind of chili that is growing with the pods uprigth towards the sky. its not getting any mature chilis yet, although its full of fruits allready since a good while back. it looks awesome though, but its maturing seems to be a bit odd? are there varieties with uprigth pods that mature all at once later in the season?
Hey bone, nice to hear you already got seeds for the next season
Whats in your list? Are you starting something now and maybe overwinter?
The upright chilies may be tabasco or tabasco-type, nice ones.
i will plant the new seeds indoors during the beginning of winter here (november/december) - its a lot of kinds of seeds..
but amongst others;
chinense:
long chocolate habanero
gambian red
various scotch bonnets
trinidad;
yellow morouga
indian;
naga morich
south american;
criolla sella
aji crystal
aji habanero
aji norteno
manzano red (rocotto!)
american;
Datil
ring of fire (a cayenne hybrid? freebee!)
asian;
thai dragon
and some jalapeño hybrid too.
from comercial chili;
tiny birds eye type or similar. plenty heat.
on the side of those i will try my best to reveg all the plants from this year that handle the winter. i might only get rid of a few of them to only get more space for the ones i reveg for next year.
i have still not tried all of the chilis im growing now to know if they are all worth it though.. so ill see.
tabasco type? could be - its hotter than the cayennes, even green. a more smoky heat. if i like it i will keep seeds from it too, since almost all of the chilis on this one are hand polinated. if its a really hot one, i will keep all seeds i can, but then there will be various that might be hybrids of different strains. i use same polinating tool for all chilis atm.
i got righth now some of those brazilian starfish growing, but they are the LAST of all kinds i got to start flower. needs long veg-time. i read many aji's produce better the 2nd year, so this is why i want to reveg as many as i can.
the first part on your list is awesome, well the rest too but the first bunch will be killer! hehe we gotto compare results on the thai dragons, the aji crystal and the rest of the varieties thats the same or very similar
the morouga is related to trinidad scorpion as far as i know.
i tried today some jalapeños, bubba and inca-berry but its too early to have any heat yet. i think allwayas the first chilis i try are sweet, so i cant really say yet anything.
Great lists guys
Choosing is harder than mj seeds LOL
Having little space myself i try to start only a few new varieties every year and use seeds/hybrids from last year's cross pollination to see what happens
Even in the near 100 degree (37 C) dry heat I water my cayenne every other day. About 3 gallons each watering on a drip so they get a fairly deep and nice watering I think.
The leaves seem perfectly fine. I'll snap a pic tonight.
Also do ants do any harm? I see a few red ants that like to crawl around on my plant.
3 gallons each plant every two days is a lot, but while they need it and use it up its no trouble. i use a lot of mulch, i got same temps as you or even hotter, but i water max a gallon per plant every two days, and that is only if the soil is dry. in some spots, for example in the midle of one of my small cayenne "field" (hehe) the sun does not dry out the soil as fast and they use less water.
for this i have divided up my plots so its a small "lake" or earth wall to retain water for each 3-4 plants. since growing in the ground, the soaking is almost essential. i got to say when temps go above 100ºF i water some of the plants every day, since in the spots where the plants get a lot of light, they use a lot of water.
for next year i will make the rows further apart and also plant the plants with more distance between them. minimum 2-3 feet between each chili plant seems to be good. the chilis grow more branchy than sweet peppers, so i failed with the planning a bit this year, giving more space to the sweet peppers thinking the chilis would grow smaller. it still produces rediculous amounts of cayennes a day, but the access to pick them is getting worse every day!
also i will plant the baccatums a bit further a part than the other chilis, since some of them grow really tall (up to my chest atm) and spread out like a small tree.
been oven drying cayennes today i did it at 90ºC and i really like the hint of toasted flavour. it took a good 5 hours but i think it might keep more flavour drying it even slower, but this work fine. i ground it in a morter by hand and i will do some more batches later untill i filled a quarter gallon masonry jar with this powder/crush. really tasty to sprinkle on anything