Nice! Not only are the leaves especially green, they're smoother, narrower, and more pointed than other Habs and Bonnets, more like
annuum leaves. Bonda Ma Jacques and Chupetinha both have leaves like that, one of the reasons I like those plants so much.
I noticed on your seed packet that the pods have what I always think of as the "classic" Habanero shape. I like it!
Good luck with your grow this year! It sure has been feeling like spring lately...
I did very little last year in my garden. A few tomatoes , some greens , and a couple of peppers.
This year I plan to do much more again. SB peppers are my favorites. I sort of specialize on them.
I had given SB seeds to some folks here. Several strains. I didn't even look in on the forum last summer to their results. If I gave you seeds would you be so kind as to tell
your thoughts. Good or Bad ... taste/aroma .... did they grow well ... etc
Thanks & Peace,
P. Dreadie
Sorry to derail your thread with the Habanero discussion, Dreadie...I wrote the post below before I realized you were asking about Scotch Bonnet seeds that
you had sent out to THP growers...My response is not exactly relevant then, but I spent a few minutes composing it, so I'd rather not delete it...
I've grown "True Jamaican Scotch Bonnet" from Peppermania for 2 years, 12 plants both years, in-ground, in very hot, long summers. Compared to the other
chinenses in the garden, they are a little slower to start and a little slower-growing, but tend to produce better than the others in the most intense heat of the summer. The overall productivity is average, but in the very hottest part of the summer they produce the best.
One other oddity I've noticed about this particular variety—The first couple of waves of pods have only mild-to-medium heat. The full Hab-strength pods don't come until the end of the season. Maybe I'm doing something wrong...Maybe some other growers here have some input on that matter. The flavor and aroma of the full-strength pods are excellent...I can't really describe it, only to say that it's more "noble" than the other Caribbean
chinenses, which can be overly pungent for some people. (I'm speaking of Congo Trinidad in particular, one of my personal favorites, but which my wife and one of my co-workers say smells like burnt plastic.) When I puree the fresh pods with lime juice to make a pepper "mash" the aroma and flavor really come out. Maybe you could call it "smokey;" it's hard to describe. Wonderful, though.
One of my favorite things about full-sized Jamaican Scotch Bonnets are their color and shape—I think it's one of the prettiest of any fruit around. These pods are from my 2011 grow: