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AHayastani's GLOG 2022

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🌴 Welcome to my GLOG!


🌴 I have a small urban terrace garden where I grow mainly peppers in containers. My location is Chiapas, Mexico. The local climate is tropical with pronounced dry and rainy seasons. The temperatures can sometimes be too much for the plants to bear (especially around Easter), but in general they manage. The climate makes that I can grow peppers year round, although pest pressure is really high. Especially mites are a problem... I apply neem oil copiously, but it does not always work...


🌴 This GLOG will follow my 2022 pepper endeavours. Enjoy 🥵
 
...I admittedly did not pay much attention to its phenotype, only to size (big) and taste (crunchy with some sweet).

As is often said, "Looks ain't everything", lol. Those sound delicious! I can't even buy rocotos around here.:(
 
As is often said, "Looks ain't everything", lol. Those sound delicious! I can't even buy rocotos around here.:(

Usually I pay attention to the looks of my peppers, but in this case I was interested in knowing whether the species will succeed in my climate. I took what was in front of me because that would "do the job". Of course, now they want to know the details I didn't pay attention to :rofl:

Even here, rocotos are not commonly available. Only some people from the Highlands occasionally sell them. They sell a lot of it on the bimonthly market because most vendors are from the Highlands. In general, I like their taste, although I didn't like much the rocotos with an earthy taste (fresh, disappeared on cooking). I have tried stuffed rocotos, but they were just regular. I have also made several batches of jam.

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The rocotos in the picture above are not from the Chiapas Highlands. I bought them on a recent trip to Michoacán in the Center of México. Rocoto is commonly available there.

Yep, I suppose a buck/bag and the affordability is a relative thing, but at least fresh is fresh!

We live in an isolated area, so transportation costs are high. Locals prefer local produce. Also, our tropical climate complicates the storage of produce, so "fresh" is very important here.

Allow me to entertain you with some snapshots of the fruit and vegetables we bought on the bimonthly market. After a few visits I began to take photos of what we bought to show to my family.

The long bean-shaped fruit is Inga edulis, a tree that is planted to provide shade in coffee plantations. It contains a small amount of a very sweet pulp. Usually not commercially available. Workers and locals consume them on the spot.

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I bought a lot of potatoes that time... Local potatoes don't store well and contain a lot of starch.

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The plastic bag in front contains pan de palo, jackfruit seeds.

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I also bought a small baggie of "miscellaneous peppers".

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There often is a lady that sells conservas: jams, salsas, some pickled vegetables/fruits. I sometimes buy salsa macha, if not only to know what the competition has to offer. This particular salsa macha contains arándanos (blueberries) that impart a subtil sweet kick. Too subtil for me, but the idea is good.

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I've also bought several types of beans, but only once I came accross ejotes (green beans). There was a pod with ripe seeds that could be sown already, so I did just that. I have a container with a palm tree (Dypsis lutescens, I believe, grown from seed) and planted the beans there. It is not my immediate intention to grow these beans for consumption, but rather to obtain sufficient seeds for when I'll have my own land (I should be moving in a year or so). A volunteer pepper (within red circle) has joined the spectacle as well.

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Impressive selection, Dieter!
You have a lot going on. Are you sure
you want to move to more space :lol: ?
 
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You have a lot going on. Are you sure
you want to move to more space :lol: ?

Definitely! Because, to quote CD:

That should open up many possibilities!

And that is what I like... We're constructing a house with small garden for ornamentals and edibles, and a roof terrace for peppers.

Is that a bowl of Mazateco peppers,

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Indeed! Several vendors on the central market offer chile mazateco this way. So you see, at least locally, chile mazateco is not an obscure or hard to find pepper. But once out of town, nobody has heard of it...

Some of the Chili de Agua I grew in
the past were mild sweet at the blossom
end, but real firecrackers at the stem end!

I ordered some products in Oaxaca, including fresh chile de agua peppers. Their form is roughly similar to mazateco, but the skin is very different. Mazateco has a thinner and rougher skin, and also - at least in my opinion - a better taste profile. It is currently very difficult to assess whether these differences are the result of genetic or climate differences (Mazatán = tropical coastal lowland, humid, hot; Oaxaca = subtropical highland, warm). I have taken some seeds of the chile de agua and they are soaking in dilute H2O2 as I type. I hope I can compare both in a few months time.

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Whynot, a cross between Jay's Peach Ghost Scorpion and 7 Pot White by Danilo Marini (Space Chilli Peppers, Italy). I bought F2 seeds in a promotion. I'm focussing on one plant (images below) but I've got two backup plants, just in case the F2 seeds won't give me the white peppers I'm hoping for. The main plant has a bushy growing habit and has begun to send out flower buds. I also like the purple traits.


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Siete Caldos SCS (San Cristóbal Strain), MX.F2 (= second generation of plants I'm growing from my own seeds; MX.F# added to my GLOG overview). This is my main plant, though I've also got a backup plant to drop in if necessary.

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I've sown the same variety (but from Tapachula) and 3/4 has germinated. All three seedlings look roughly similar. I've also sown chile mazateco (also from Tapachula) with 2/5 germination rate so far. In both cases, I plan on one plant and a backup.

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It's almost time to transplant my "Phase 2 plantlets" to their final grow bag. Especially Ají Ahuachapán (photo right, below) is growing rapidly and has begun showing off its first flower buds. I've begun selecting "Phase 3 seedlings" as well (small plantlets in photo left, below) and sadly lost one Bahamian Goat. I've lost plants in all stages, but I rarely loose them here.

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Full steam ahead, @ahayastani!

If the pods from the cross have the ghost scorpion
shape and white color, they will be stunning.
 
I liked the first pods in the middle
three rows in the SCP description!
 
Sunday was a busy day on my roof 💦 Sowing new varieties, transplanting seedlings and plantslets, cleaning up, ...

Several species of hibiscus are locally cultivated as ornamental plants. I bought one a while ago and I provided it with quite a big container. A few weeks ago, I dropped 3 seeds of Maui Purple in the same container so the hibiscus wouldn't be all alone 😊 I had received their seeds as a courtesy. I didn't know Maui Purple, but upon reading several positive opinions on this board I decided I should find a spot to plant it. By the end of February, this spot will receive good light. At the corner of the terrace, it will atract the eye of all passersby.

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I transplanted most of the plantlets of the "second phase" to their final grow bag. In the photo below, there are (left > right) SRP Stripey, Blot, and two plants of Criolla de Cocina. I provided SRP Stripey with a more voluminous container than the others based on my experience with SRP last season. That was one hulk of a plant that was suffering because of its small grow bag. This container is about double the volume.

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I also made the difficult decision to sacrifice my almost one-year old peppadew plant. I had trimmed it but the plant definitely lacks vigour and new leafy growth doesn't look healthy. A new generation of peppadew has been transplanted to its final grow bag and will take over from now on.

old​
new​
new + old​
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Is that coffee you put on the soil of that large pot?

It is. Tons of coffee here... I have a six-cup moka pot (Bialetti) that serves one mug 😬 And I have to do something with all that spent coffee... So I spread it over the surface of the grow bags. You'll find others on this board with the search engine who do exactly the same.

My daily coffee is usually from Finca Irlanda (Grupo Peters), although I buy from small-scale local producers as well.
 
I found some peppers on a 7 Pot White plant 🥳

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One plant is substantially bushier than the other and is also setting fruit earlier. The bushier specimen on the left (photo below) was affected by pests very early on. I estimate plant height ~75 cm.

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The bushier specimen:

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Dorset Naga. Apparently Sea Spring Seeds obtained plant variety protection for Dorset Naga (I was unaware of that). I was not especially interested in this variety, but the comment on the vendor's page that it grows well in low lighting triggered a "let's do an experiment" response. So I placed a plant on a bright spot but without direct sun. I grow my seedlings and plantlets on the same place. Only the first rays of the morning sun touch the plant for a short time, but this will be over in a few weeks. The plant has been flowering for some time, but yesterday I also noticed its first fruit.

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There was also an unexpectedly strong thunderstorm - rare for the dry season - and one of two mazateco seedlings was rained to death. I transplanted the survivor to a small grow bag.

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Temperatures are a bit higher than what they should be, but I'm not complaining.

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