Sri Lanka MI-2:
http://www.agridept.gov.lk/index.php/en/crop-recommendations/1470
Great looking, and nice photo (I like and Liked it); are they Cayennes? (Maybe they're better than Cayennes.)
Does kind of beg the question, doesn't it, what constitutes a Cayenne? Must the pods be long? Four inches?
Are there seven-inch or longer, slender
annuums that are
not Cayennes?
According to both a Jean Andrews book and an article I've read this year, the powder sold as "Cayenne" comes from a variety of chile types, including undisclosed, non-Cayenne pods.
I have several envelopes of seeds named after the people or places the pods came from: "Mississippi-market longs", "Jaime long orange", etc.
(Ebenezer or Ichabod would have to work to have a longer, gnarlier finger than these.)
Maybe I should be calling all of those "Cayennes"; I've sort of been awaiting a definition, but there may not be one.