Hey Chris, when you say your biggest problem is that the branches get woody so fast, is that an issue due to attempts at training it or something else?cmpman1974 said:You did VERY well with Tovarii Prodigal_Son. I'm impressed. My biggest struggle with this species is the branches turn woody too fast. You have the magic touch!
Chris
I am not trading or shipping any seeds currently. I have a plant setting flowers now so I will have more seeds to trade this winter. I sent a few hundred of these around the USA,S.America,ad Europe last fall and winter. There should be a lot of seed floating around at the end of this year.germanico said:This is a purely amazing plant!
is there any chance to get some seeds?
Thank you. I will speak for Chris since we talk about wild chiles almost daily,and he doesn't use THP very often these days.Brutaldiver said:Hey Chris, when you say your biggest problem is that the branches get woody so fast, is that an issue due to attempts at training it or something else?
Great looking grow Prodigal_Son, big thanks and attaboys for the seed exchang, grows, pics & info!
I'm trying to donate a nice portion of these to Stefan (Meatfreak) so that he can supply some of these (and other rares) via tasty-peppers.nl. Though I'll only be able to supply if I get a good harvest so keep andere eye on the forum.wildseed57 said:Tovarii is one of the rare species that has alluded me once more this year I was gifted some seeds of it, but none grew, last year I grew 4 galapagoense for the first time out of 4 tries so I know its just a matter of time, but finding a vendor that has them will take some time, Judy at pepperlover.com doesn't have any, but she does have several other nice wild species I did look at what rainbow seeds had, but They are out of stock of the Tovarii, so I'm stuck now. So I will have to look else where, I do have plenty of the galapagoense which I'm growing again and all 4 made it, that I had overwintered. I have 3 eximium plants and seeds, but don't know which variety it is so I do have some seed that I can trade and play with.
John's photo's have me lusting to grow not just the Tovarii, but Lanceolatum, Flexuosum, and others that he has amazingly been able to grow. I can't wait to see what all he is growing this year, and his great photo's.
Rares are fun but are not often tasty.
There are only a few true wilds that are in our gardening circles. There are a lot that get labeled as "wild" but really are landrace varieties and not a true wild.Spicy Mushroom said:I never quite understood the difference between the designation of "semi-wild" versus "wild", but that aside I feel i've heard of at least a few of them being great tasting.
Was curious how that plant did. I think tovarii would hold up to your conditions better than other wilds. The sun isn't as rough on them.stc3248 said:Hey John...I still have one tiny plant from last year's grow. It only got up to about 8" then stalled out. I just started feeding her again so we shall see if she can finally get going.
Thanks a lot for that info! I got in touch with some people at finland who might have seeds this fall, too. If they won't have a good harvest, I guess, I'll ask again this fall. ;-)Pr0digal_son said:I am not trading or shipping any seeds currently. I have a plant setting flowers now so I will have more seeds to trade this winter. I sent a few hundred of these around the USA,S.America,ad Europe last fall and winter. There should be a lot of seed floating around at the end of this year.