Yes, but I'm in oregon and it's now september. In all my past years of growing I could count on maturity by this point, because we don't have a very hot september here. Just figured maybe cross pollination or something like that might have happened...willard3 said:Patience is a virtue in growing chiles........
Summers here don't really get kickin til late june and stays fairly consistently dry and around the 70-90 range until maybe mid september, where it starts to cool down and slide back into the 50ish degree drizzle weather for a good 8 months.geeme said:Define "summer" for your area - it really makes a difference. We have very short "summers" here - and I quote it because this year it's almost like we haven't had a summer at all. It's been very rainy and very chilly so the plants are just slugging along as slowly as I've ever seen. We normally have short growing seasons (N.E. Ohio), but this year is almost ridiculous. My chinenses have only started to pod up in the last couple of weeks, and none are remotely ripe - most are not even full-size yet. You know, some years you win, and some years you lose.