The Swedes, are big on rocotos as they have a climate that the Rocoto's seem to like, I wonder if any of our Swedish and Norwegian friends have grown any, it will be interesting to find out.
I shall ask the people I know in Europe and get back to you. It`s an interesting idea.wildseed57 said:The Swedes, are big on rocotos as they have a climate that the Rocoto's seem to like, I wonder if any of our Swedish and Norwegian friends have grown any, it will be interesting to find out.
George, I`ve asked and it seems to be a tricky question  to answer. There MAY be one strain from Bolivia that has much lower heat, but people are growing it this year to find out if the low heat aspect is reproducible. It will be Fall until that one is answered, but i`ll let you know then. I`ve also been told that pods grown in cool greenhouses in winter have a lot less heat - grown at 60-65°F.Âwildseed57 said:The Swedes, are big on rocotos as they have a climate that the Rocoto's seem to like, I wonder if any of our Swedish and Norwegian friends have grown any, it will be interesting to find out.
i was just gonna say some of those look familiar LOLSL3 said:
wes480 said:Just received my seeds from Peru, 21 days after ordering. Looks like the wait is all due to the postal services in Peru and the USA. They arrived just under the wire to try one or two varieties this year here in Zone 6A.
Â
One thing that hasn't been mentioned yet is the packing. The seller put very thin bubble wrap around the seed package, then sent the whole thing in a regular envelope. It was much thinner than the typical envelope for an American SASBE, yet it came through the mail with no damage. I wonder if that's worth trying here.
Â
My question/point of discussion is not about the packaging,etc., per above. Having experienced the fact that the US Customs people will not allow seeds into the USA, I've had commercially packged seeds from several Euro countries taken & destroyed at re-entry to USA. FWIW, I have seen the very same brands of seeds for sale here in USA garden centers! Ebay seems to be a window of oppourtunity to get foreign seeds-at least for now? On othe garden boards many have had "sporadic luck" sending/getting seeds from abroad.
For what it`s worth, I`ve had seeds sent to me from all over the world this year, including South America, Asia, Europe, Australia and I have yet to have an issue with Customs in the USA. All were labelled "Pepper Seeds" as well. I`m not sure what your local Customs issue is, but it is not the norm in my experience.BigMike said:Â
Â
My question/point of discussion is not about the packaging,etc., per above. Having experienced the fact that the US Customs people will not allow seeds into the USA, I've had commercially packged seeds from several Euro countries taken & destroyed at re-entry to USA. FWIW, I have seen the very same brands of seeds for sale here in USA garden centers! Ebay seems to be a window of oppourtunity to get foreign seeds-at least for now? On othe garden boards many have had "sporadic luck" sending/getting seeds from abroad
Looking good. Now I can't wait to grow these next season!ChiliNoob said:Here's a few of mine.
Top row Arnaucho 2, Cerezo 1, Cerezo 2
Middle row Pipi de Mono, Paprika and Rocoto
Bottom row Verde, Panca and Cacho de Cabra
I've already picked a few ripe Pipi de Monos and there are a few more ready for harvesting, plus one Paprika. I tried an unripe Verde already, these are quite tasty - I'm surprised that more people aren't growing them.
I've also got pods just forming on the Limos. I had one pod on an Amarillo but it snapped off when I repotted it and it hasn't put out any more pods yet. No sign of pods on the Pacay at all, not sure if there's enough time left here to get any ripe ones this year.