I'm a few hours north in the Daytona Beach area. Yup, July is coming... then August, it's sure to test the chutzpah of your pubescens! Good luck with your experiment and ty for the welcome!Wicked Mike said:Okay, WOW. This is actually something I've been working on for a while now. What part of Florida are you in? I'm down in Miami and have been experimenting with different pubescens varieties (two of which are alive and well going into July).
I'll be watching your progress on this topic. I haven't been able to get rocotos to geminate and I don't like the thought of growing a pepper plant only for a few months and having it die.. yeah.. spoiled by the year round pepper growing weather of the Sunshine State.solid7 said:Reviving a zombie topic...Â
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I refuse to believe that Rocotos can't be raised in Florida. So, it's not a matter of "if" they can be grown, for me, but "how" they can be grown.
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I have 2 red rocotos that are both growing in full shade, for the entire day. And they're doing fantastic - so far. So, I'm encouraged.
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In the meantime, I've made seed starts on:
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Aji Oro
CAP 907
CAP 468
Ecuadorian Red
Peru Bitdumi
Turbo Pube
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I'm absolutely dead set on getting this done.
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What I know so far:
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Past experience has shown me that these absolutely, positively, HATE warm roots. That means that one has to be careful with containers, and definitely needs to mulch the bejesus out of our sandy soil. Secondly, they don't like extreme UV. Thirdly, humidity does, indeed, seem to be a problem. And fourth - they don't seem to get as many pests, but when they do, the hairiness makes them the hardest to treat.
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With that in mind, I've selected areas that are naturally radiant cooled, by being under vegetation. IN my case, areca palms. If I'm comfortable, the rocotos seem to be. I also put one on my screened in porch. I let it get the late late afternoon sun. No problems, there. But since it's in a container, I have it insulated by a wood planter.
ÂMuckyai said:I'll be watching your progress on this topic. I haven't been able to get rocotos to geminate and I don't like the thought of growing a pepper plant only for a few months and having it die.. yeah.. spoiled by the year round pepper growing weather of the Sunshine State.
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ÂMuckyai said:I haven't been able to get rocotos to geminate and I don't like the thought of growing a pepper plant only for a few months and having it die
ShowMeDaSauce said:Mine do much better in LOTS of shade. Virtually no direct sun light at all. Plants do fine in the sun, they just wont hold a flower long enough to produce a pod. Im going to almost totally enclose my largest one today or tomorrow with lattice and my hillbilly shade cloth. My smallest one gets hardly any full sun and it seems to like it just fine.