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Two Mystery Peppers - Possible Hybrid??

Hello Everyone!
 
I started growing hot peppers in 2007 when my wife came home from a master gardeners plant sale with a Chocolate Habanero seedling for me to add to our vegetable garden. Why a Chocolate Habanero? Well, because it's chocolate. ;) We soon found out that "chocolate" just described the color and the keyword in the name was actually Habanero. But these were unlike any Habanero pepper I'd ever eaten before. We both became big fans of the flavor and the heat. Though we really had to be careful because it was easy to add too much with these peppers.
 
I harvested seeds from this plant and grew these peppers again in 2008 and 2009. I shared the pods with a lot of my friends and co-workers, developing a reputation as the "hot pepper guy". Then in 2010 a friend gave me some Dorset Naga seeds and I grew them right next to my Choc. Habs. The following year, in 2011, I was given a Bhut Jolokia plant that I again grew next to my Chocolate Habs. Once more I wintered over the Choc Habs and had a great crop of pods in 2012.
 
Now when the 2013 season rolled around, I could not find my seeds and only one of my Chocolate Habs made it through the winter. I was worried that I wouldn't have any pods if something happened to the plant. So, I asked my friends and co-workers if any of them had saved seeds from the Chocolate Habs I had shared with them and one person did! They had saved seeds from every year I grew them but had saved them all in the same bag. So here is what I have coming up from those seeds. Maybe you can help me figure out if they are some sort of hybrid or maybe my friend got his seed labels mixed up.
 
1st Plant
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Flowers from 1st plant.
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Pod from 1st plant.
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2nd plant.
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Flowers from 2nd plant.
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Pods from 2nd plant.
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It's going to be fun watching these pods ripen and even more fun to eat them and see what they taste like. Anyone care to venture a guess as to what I've got growing here?
 
Cheers!
 
 
Jedisushi is correct! I too believe these plants to be peppers! Seriously though, it is hard to tell at this stage. The pods could change shape as they grow. Repost when they are fully mature and you will get more mileage toward an actual ID as opposed to pure speculation.
 
thegreenman said:
well, if you end up having lost your chocolate hab seeds, I'd be happy to send you some more, as I'll have plenty in a few weeks. Good luck with your mystery peppers. 
 
That's great! Thank you for the offer. My wintered over choc. hab. is doing great.
 
Mystery Plant #1 Update: The fruit from the first plant is turning from pale green to white. I'm pretty sure this isn't coming from seed my friend may have collected from any of my pods. The mystery continues...
 
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D.
 
Update Plant #1: There are a lot of pods on this plant. Yeah! They start out light green and get paler until they are almost white. I am waiting to see if they turn orange/red like plant #2. I have yet to find a similar looking pod color/shape combo after looking at hundreds of pictures on the net. It's still a mystery pepper.
 
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Update plant #2: These pods were very round initially but have gotten more elongated. They are starting to turn orange now. I tasted a small one and it was hot...like bhut hot.
 
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Both of the plants look very similar and I would guess that they are from the same stock.
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D
 
Plant #1 is finally starting to ripen up and like plant #2, the first blushes of color are orange.
 
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Does anyone care to share their thoughts on what type of pepper this is?
 
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I haven't eaten one yet. I'm waiting to see if the pod goes red before I try it. I don't know that I can wait much longer though. :-)
 
D.
 
I've seen other Bhut hybrids look like Plant #1, including Bhut's mixed with standard annuums. The plant and leaves give me that crossed vibe as well.
 
You have something pretty unusual imho. I would save the seeds from several different pods, but remember every seed you plant next year (F2 or F3 generation) will produce different plants and pod shapes because crosses work like that. Though if you keep selecting your favorite "lines", and regrow them year after year, it will eventually stabilize and grow true around the 7th or 8th generation.  If i were forced to guess, i'd say it's a bhut x annuum, or bhut x chocolate hab. I think the red colored gene is dominant over the brown (?)
 
Plant #2 seems similar in a way, a little harder to tell. I agree, the seeds from both plants may have come from the same stock, maybe even the same parent pod.
 
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