Hello and welcome from Savannah GA. Good luck man!
Hi Heating up: Thanks so much. Your picture looks just like my peppers but I don't want to get overly excited because I have seen photos of at least 8 varieties that look like them too. However, what really got me interested was your profile picture and the state of ripeness of the pepper in the pic. Mine ripen in the exact same manner... first with slpotchy stripes of orange and then turning that beautiful deep red color when they are ripe. If you know of anyone who knows of a bulk importer, I would be very grateful for that information. Thanks!Hi Doc, to me they look like Faria AKA Tobago Scotch Bonnet. My current favorite. I can take a shot of one cut open if that would help.
When you say not terribly hot, where on the heat scale are you referring? (heat can be subjective). Our peppers are on a par with the heat of an orange Habanero. Would you say the Panama is about that level of heat?It's a family member of what the locals here call "Panama". A tasty bonnet and not terribly hot.
Some also label it ,incorrectly, as manzanillo(little apple)
You never know.
And welcome, BTW.
You may be growing a one off stable hybrid, or your growing method instills a specific flavor profile.
Best (IMHO) would be to harvest a few thousand seeds and find a grower to contract, or a friend to grow a couple dozen to see if it's the peppers, or the pepper grower that makes the taste.
Better to sell out than to have excess inferior product.