I couldn't really find anything online so that may be something to test. I'll probably order seeds and try to start it this year, but I don't expect fruit.Dane said:Last year I grew Solanum caripense, Solanum quitoense, and Solanum muricatum. Favorite of the 3 was the quitoense. Plant just looks wicked.
The aniomalum looks interesting. Wondering if it has any cross compatibility with capsicum.
Yeah, I'd definitely be interested. Thanks for the offer. And I found them on Tradewinds while looking at a couple wilds. http://www.tradewindsfruit.com/tubocapsicum-anomalum-wild-japanese-pepper-seedsDane said:I think I have seed for the first 2 if your interested. the pepino melon never ripened for me so none of those.
Where are you finding seeds for the aniomalum?
Ground cherries, aka cape gooseberries I believe. To me, if you just eat them straight out of the husk right after they ripen and fall off, it's like a sweet/fruity cherry tomato. Mine are growing and producing surprisingly well considering the plant was started after all my peppers and it's only in a 2ish gallon burlap bag.peppamang said:Hey yall. what are ground cherries?
I've grown otricoli berry before. It's an orange edible variety of black nightshade. Grows stupid fast. Overgrew a 7 gal bucket in a couple months. Waterloss through transpiration actually did it in because I couldn't water it often enough last summer (got so big it needed to be watered twice a day). The little fruits were good but strong. I liked a handful in spaghetti sauce but otherwise it was hard to find a use for them.
Walchit gave me some shwartzbeen that I just remembered I had after reading this, so I'll sow those this week and see what I can do with them.
Growing some mainstram nightshades too. tomato, potato, pepper of course.
I'm pretty interested by wild varieties and rarer capsicums. Had a whole 72 tray of wilds this year but ended up dropping them and had no idea what was what. Those anomalums are pretty rad. Gunna save the link and check them out for next year.
I'm growing Aunt Molly from Baker's Creek, I believe. I actually checked with a ruler and it's exactly a foot from soil to highest point, but the main stem is only a few inches tall.Rockandrollin said:I'm growing Aunt Molly's and Goldie ground cherries. I have about 8 plants total. The Aunt Molly's have been the most prolific for me. The photo is of 4 plants of Aunt Molly's and a basketball for reference.
AndyW, Mine are much lower growing than yours. Which variety did you grow?
These have been a good addition to the garden and I will definitely try them again next year.