plant-care How long to produce pods for an overwinter?

Jalapeños say 70-80 days, which I believe is days from plant out to harvest. Many superhot chinense will say 90-150 days.

I have a couple overwinters in small pots that I've started hardening off, and will be replanting in grow bags (5-10gal) in the next few weeks.

I'm assuming I'll see pods earlier - can anyone give me an idea of how long it might take?
 
I'm not sure but I've had 2 overwintered Rocoto's that I planted a month ago and no flowers or pods yet and the same with a couple of Bishops Crowns that survived the winter outside lots of new growth but no flowers yet. 
 
My Aji Amarillo that stayed outside during the mild Aridzona winter has flowers and a few nacent pods going.
 
The OWs have been slowly growing new leaves for a month or more.  When the night time lows start to tickle 60, the OW plants really start to 'wake up' and flower, etc.
 
JoynersHotPeppers said:
I no longer over winter, two years in a row planting from seeds yielded plants that out produced the OWs.
 
Interesting. Did you cut them all the way back to sticks?
 
I brought mine inside under a light, so they have new growth and have developed and dropped probably close to 100 flowers.
 
I thought a big point of overwintering was to get a head start on the next season.
 
austin87 said:
 
Interesting. Did you cut them all the way back to sticks?
 
I brought mine inside under a light, so they have new growth and have developed and dropped probably close to 100 flowers.
 
I thought a big point of overwintering was to get a head start on the next season.
No I trimmed them well and they were under T5s all winter long and full of flowers, newly planted seeds of same species outgrew them and out produced. 
 
JoynersHotPeppers said:
I no longer over winter, two years in a row planting from seeds yielded plants that out produced the OWs.
I'm really surprised to hear that. Even though I can stay planted out year round, my plants do slow down to almost dormancy in the winter, and when warm weather comes back around, my oldies take off like a rocket. Some of my small plants leap up quickly, but my multi-year plants are a bush by the time the others even think about bearing.
 
solid7 said:
I'm really surprised to hear that. Even though I can stay planted out year round, my plants do slow down to almost dormancy in the winter, and when warm weather comes back around, my oldies take off like a rocket. Some of my small plants leap up quickly, but my multi-year plants are a bush by the time the others even think about bearing.
This is my understanding of why you would want to overwinter. We'll see, I just moved my overwinters back outside into 5 gal root pouches from small (about 1/2 gal) pots. We are still getting below 60 at night but I ran out of room inside with the seed starts. Might take a couple weeks before we're not dropping below 60 then I expect (hope!) they go bonkers.
 
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