This list is just wrong. Number 1 and 2 are not true. Each variety has their own temperature range that they want to get in. 95 to 65 f is good for my Christmas Bells but my Peru Yellow hates that range and won't set a pod. It wants temps in the low 50s. Instead of looking at your plants...
Havana Seasoning. My weather destroyed them and never got a pod. I yanked out the one that never even bloomed and the one that bloomed but never set is on thin ice. It doesn't look like it is growing well and might soon find itself in the bin while a Shattah or something replaces it. Havana...
Gardening is one of the greatest hobbies--welcome to a hobby you can enjoy for the rest of your life!
The bigger the pot, the bigger the plant...why not experiment?
While it has been unseasonably warm for everyone else, it has been unseasonably cold for me. Nighttime lows 15f below normal so we're getting frosts. No damage to anything but nothing ripened this week. Ugh!
I noticed that Malih-Helow is throwing several flowers/node on my largest plant...
"Fast growth..." Makes me wonder--have you given them lots of fertilizer? If they get too much, the react by growing very fast and large but suffer from blossom drop.
I look at it as about the same as a membership to the symphony or ballet. Public good that gets mostly public money that still charges for memberships & tickets.
Couldn't resist posting--Native Seeds' crop preservation effort, including their work preserving wild & native heirloom chiles, was part of the recognition of Tucson's importance for cuisine & food culture
http://ediblebajaarizona.com/tucson-designated-unesco-world-city-of-gastronomy
My first seeding to pop this round was a tomato! Wonder if 2016 will be Year of Tomatoes for me.
Also figured out my purple tomato plant is probably a Safari. Certainly looks like some tomatoes I remember buying a few months ago.