I thought I was growing Ají Charapita, but it turns out a bee had pollinated it with another species. I have no idea what this cross could be, Im just lucky it turned out this way. Have you guys ever seen anything like this?
I had Jalapeños, Scorpion Peppers, Ghost Peppers, Habaneros, Tabasco, Poblanos, Ají Yellow, and Cayenne.DontPanic said:Interesting looking pepper.
Do you recall what other varieties of pepper plant were growing nearby your Ají Charapita last year?
CaneDog said:That one pod sure looks Habanero-like.
DontPanic said:
Yeah, that sure looks like a constricted calyx on the red one.
CaneDog said:That one pod sure looks Habanero-like. How do you like the pods?
I've only been able to see up to 3 flowers per node.The_NorthEast_ChileMan said:
The current pandemic disables me from sending out any seeds at this precise moment. Fortunately for me, my climate allows me to plant all year long, so I planted some F2’s a few days ago. If you’d like, I could send you some F3’s down the road this year so you could pot up for next season. I’ll make sure to gather plenty seeds, since they don’t give out too many. Sounds good?PepperFish said:I'd be willing to grow out an F2 generation and would be happy to keep you updated with pictures and send back seeds from any desirable pods. Its late to get started here but I'm doing a similar project with some commercial varieties I picked up while traveling through the Caribbean earlier this winter (assuming they're F1). I'm growing them out in 3 gallon pots so I can bring them in under the lights this fall if needed. I'm making organza iso bags too, just to make sure everyone stays in thier lane.
CaneDog said:Interesting that the charapita growing guide identifies aji charipita as capsicum frutescens, when aji charapita commonly refers to a capsicum chinense variety. I don't see a picture in the guide from which I can get a dispositive ID on theirs. Just looking through it though, it seems to have a lot of interesting information and images.
ahayastani said:An interesting observation... So when I search for aji charapita and frutescens, I end up with a lot of references that have one common denominator: the publication source is an institution located in Peru. "International sources" seem to relate to it as chinense:
Costaricandude said:The current pandemic disables me from sending out any seeds at this precise moment. Fortunately for me, my climate allows me to plant all year long, so I planted some F2s a few days ago. If youd like, I could send you some F3s down the road this year so you could pot up for next season. Ill make sure to gather plenty seeds, since they dont give out too many. Sounds good?
CaneDog said:
I'm not getting those same hits searching from my geography, but I did finds some pages at other sites that gave it a frutescens ID despite showing a picture of the fruit with an annular constriction of the calyx, which one would expect to find in chinense, but not frutescens. I couldn't find a picture with that view in the guide. I wonder if there is a frutescens "aji charipita" the institute has identified and works with or if it's simply a mistaken ID, perhaps based on upright pods. If there is one, it would cool to know more about it.