i dont think they are eitherim pretty convinced theyre not peach habs.....
i,ll have to do some investigating into where m freind got this from. its got me curious as hell now to find out what they are...
jeez ..... me fail english??? thats unpossible!!
My old mom wanted a Pepper without heat.
So I got some seeds from a local friend, and was told that it was a Peach Habanero without heat.
And it was completely without heat, I did not think it tasted very good, maybe because I expect the heat when mention Habanero
would the same ph levels apply to hydro? What nutes would be the best for hydro? Sorry for the hijackFourth would be to reframe from using nitrogen rich fertilizer, nitrogen promotes foliage growth.(reducing yield) You want to feed with a potassium , phosphorus based fertilizer. (fish emulsion, kelp, rock phosphate) These help in the growth of the actual chili peppers.
I have also read that a slight acidic ph level of 6.5 can also effect the heat in peppers. Peppers grow well in a ph range of 6.5 to neutral 7.0
I suppose it is topic drift but the questions about PH, stressing and hydro reminded me of this article. Pay particular attention to the last paragraph:
http://maximumyield.com/article_sh_db.php?articleID=791&yearVar=2012&issueVar=February&featureVar=true
Beware, don't underestimate them...
I had bought a Peach Habanero plant the last couple years. Dying to try it, I cut up a few early in the season, some of the first to ripen, and put them in tacos. The tacos were disappointingly hot, nowhere near even a regular habanero. So later that year, around summer, I decided... what the hell? Why not, grab a Peach Hab and try it whole. It can't be that bad. After all... those tacos with 3 of them was weak. BIG MISTAKE. Ate the entire thing, whole. At least tried to. Got my ass royally handed to me.
Moral of the story: Never underestimate the strength of a Peach Habanero. Trust me. It was from the same plant, the same year--just a hell of a lot hotter and ripened in hotter temperatures and with more sunlight.
Yes. I got almost all of my plants the last few years from there. I didn't say that it had "zero detectable heat" though--I simply meant that the tacos, with 3 peach habs, were nowhere near as hot as the typical tacos I was used to with orange habs even similar C. chinense peppers (many of which I also bought from CCN). I was expecting with that heat level from 3 peppers, surely I could handle just ONE, whole. Nope.What was the origin of the Peach Hab plant? CCN?
I'll confirm the heat of the pods from my plants once some more pods ripen. I very much doubt it will go from zero detectable heat (not even warm) to screaming hot.
Yes. I got almost all of my plants the last few years from there. I didn't say that it had "zero detectable heat" though--I simply meant that the tacos, with 3 peach habs, was nowhere near as hot as the typical tacos I was used to with orange habs even similar C. chinense peppers (many of which I also bought from CCN). I was expecting with that heat level from 3 peppers, surely I could handle just ONE, whole. Nope.
I had a non-heat seeker test a piece of the third pod to ripen on my plant who found it very mild. It was a small pod with only two seeds in it.
I had a non-heat seeker test a piece of the third pod to ripen on my plant who found it very mild. It was a small pod with only two seeds in it.