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P. Dreadie Memorial Group Grow 2016

Long-time THP veterans mourned the loss last August of Amarillo, Texas musician/songwriter/silversmith/chilehead Erin Mason, known to us here on the boards as P. Dreadie. Erin was an enigma, one of the most interesting and creative, yet gentle and loving guys I ever knew. Many of us may be unaware that he played harmonica in one of the original Austin, Texas bands of the early 1970s "Cosmic Cowboy" era, Alvin Crow and the Pleasant Valley Boys. When Erin decided to step off of Alvin's perpetually-touring bus and return to Amarillo, he travelled to Jamaica, fell in love with the Reggae beat, collected the best Scotch Bonnet fruit he could find, and his alter-ego Papa Dreadie was born.

In 2013 Erin sent me a few pods of the Scotch Bonnets he had been breeding, carefully selected descendants of the original fruit he brought back from the Caribbean all those years ago. I harvested every single seed from those pods, and stored them away, as I focused increasing attention on other varieties. When his wife Liz gave us the news last August that Erin had passed, I knew what I had to do with those seeds: a community grow in his memory. I have already shared about half of them, and I will continue to share them with experienced growers of the Scotch Bonnet until they are gone.

Papa Dreadie Scotch Bonnet Select, grown by Erin in 2013:

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Lifetime memories posted by Liz Mason on Erin's FB page. Liz is an extremely talented professional photographer:

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The legendary bus:

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Tried the Red Cross with some friends tonight and it was very good. I'm not good with flavor but it was crunchy and juicy. Not too flowery. Hab heat.

Everyone agreed it was a winner.

I kept 2 Dreadie plants. The second is still in a solo cup and is just starting to set pods so we'll see how they turn out.
Everyone is getting a pot upgrade his week.
 
Devv said:
Hmmmmm.
 
Mine seem true
 
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Looking real good there Scott!!! :dance:
 
Malarky said:
Tried the Red Cross with some friends tonight and it was very good. I'm not good with flavor but it was crunchy and juicy. Not too flowery. Hab heat.

Everyone agreed it was a winner.

I kept 2 Dreadie plants. The second is still in a solo cup and is just starting to set pods so we'll see how they turn out.
Everyone is getting a pot upgrade his week.
 
Nice! You may have something special there, then, Matt...Sounds like the other pollen was from Forbing Naga... :cool:
 
Trident chilli said:
Hopefully the other two plants will remain true to form ... keep us posted
 
+1 what you said, John...By the way, Denniz Pablo is unable to log into his THP account, but wanted me to tell you that he's growing your Obeah f2...
 
For the group: My 12 plants of Papa Dreadie Scotch Bonnet, transplanted yesterday into the oldest and richest of my forest soil beds:
 
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Here's a mystery: I have a number of various peppers growing on the property, a total of 6 that I have potted, the rest in the dirt. I have no aphids or other pests that I know of on ANY of them except one: My potted PDreadie. Something is dining on the leaves, but only on the PDreadie plant. I have a Rocoto Amarillo and an Aji White Lightning Bolt directly next to it, and an Aji Amarillo, Aji Lemon Drop and an Aji Mango in pots within a few feet, but none of them infected.
 
I can visually not find a worm or mite or other pest on these leaves. The other PDreadie, out in the garden about 30 yards away has no sign of infestation.
 
Is there a chinense-specific pest that prefers Scotch Bonnets? This little bastard takes large chunks out of the leaves, then moves on to another leaf without finishing the one it was on.
 
Befuddled on the tundra.....me.
 
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stettoman said:
That was my first guess, Scott. I just can't find any. As much as has been eaten any catepillars would be at least big enough to see, yes?
 
That really looks like hornworm damage. Check for large, blocky feces below the damaged areas...
 
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