Near Decatur.
Collio! Iām in Huntsville.Near Decatur.
Sure. Just message me your info. I'm more than happy to share some seeds with you.I would like to get some of these Rome jalapeno seeds from you. Please let me know if you still have seeds available. I can't find this jalapeno seed variety anywhere!
Let me know if you would like some seeds.Would love to try it and if there not a Vaquero it be nice to have a New variety to add to my Jala growing next year,love them pickled to eat in the cooler months.
Would love some JG.Let me know if you would like some seeds.
I just now DM'ed you with that info. Thank youSure. Just message me your info. I'm more than happy to share some seeds with you.
DM your mailing info and I will send you some seeds. I'm already going to send some this week to another member.Would love some JG.
Done JG and thank you kindly sir if you need anything PM me.DM your mailing info and I will send you some seeds. I'm already going to send some this week to another member.
Well, I was a teen back in the 70's. My Dad used to plant banana peppers and jalapenos every year, but he'd get them from a nursery. Once habaneros became fashionable, he'd let me plant one of them (the generic orange kind you still can get every year). Once I got older, I got interested in growing varieties you couldn't get at the local nursery. I remember his peppers as hot, but it could be that I was young and had nothing like we have today to compare them to. The Biker Billy and Rome varieties I had this year are hot for jalapenos, but after you've had a red savina habanero or a reaper, "hot" becomes a relative term.@JGBaxter59 Have you found it difficult to find seed for Jalapenos with the heat they once had back in the 60s & 70s?
I am tired of buying seed only to eat a green cracked beauty only to find it little more than a small Green pepper with 0 heat.
I love Canned Jalapenos for the winter months here in the Mountains to keep warm, even chop them up in my Grits LOL.
I was in Japan in the 50s & Panama in the 60s Guam in the 70s. I grew up around the Oyster bars where the men would go out back sit around eat oysters & hot peppers. What Brat would not love roaming the places where food was majik & hot peppers grew wild? It was a real adventure.Well, I was a teen back in the 70's. My Dad used to plant banana peppers and jalapenos every year, but he'd get them from a nursery. Once habaneros became fashionable, he'd let me plant one of them (the generic orange kind you still can get every year). Once I got older, I got interested in growing varieties you couldn't get at the local nursery. I remember his peppers as hot, but it could be that I was young and had nothing like we have today to compare them to. The Biker Billy and Rome varieties I had this year are hot for jalapenos, but after you've had a red savina habanero or a reaper, "hot" becomes a relative term.