if you got the plant from me, it must have been crossed...the pods don't look like even a scorpion...and if you did get it from me, I will give your money back...
either way, from what I have read, the peak heat of the pods is when they first start turning their ripe color...after that, some of the capsaicin is used in production of sugar which makes the pods a little sweeter...I wish I could find that article again...was written by a female PhD out west somewhere I think..
Oh...ok...that's cool...it may be a pod with very few seeds....or maybe none...wonder what the cap glands look like...
hey, when you pick it, slice it in two and take a pic please...
and mellow is a good thing SS...
it looks hot!!!!
and it is just a few seeds...it didn't get much pollen...
if the other pods on the plant look like scorpions, then this is one too, just no tail and a weird shape...
Do scorpions smell / taste like a hab?? Because it smells/taste just like one
Devastating news here. I had a nice healthy choc congo hab plant with two + pods beginning to shape up nicely... then my two pups knocked the plant over while playing. The pot was shattered and all but one main stem was broken off.
I re-pot the one stemmed plant into a slightly larger pot (all I had available) so I'm sure it's going to spend its energy growing roots for awhile and end any chance of a harvest soon.
It appears to be recovering nicely.
Question 1: should I feed high nitrogen for root growth or is it worth trying to get it to produce fruit (low nitrogen diet)?
With the broken stems, I put them in water for a day then turned three of them into cuttings for next years harvest. They have been pruned of most leaves and all pods (my two main pods were culled) and I put them in smaller pots. So far I am optimistic that two of the three cuttings may survive. After 3 days the remaining leaves on two of them look fairly healthy but on the third cutting it appears to be continually water deprived and withering. I read that some plants can completely lose all foliage before taking root so I will leave it for another week and see how it fairs.
Everywhere I read it states that all cuttings need to be kept moist but I know these plants are prone to root rot so....
Question 2: Should I be keeping the soil mix constantly moist or should I be letting it go slightly dry between moistening? I am tending to think I let it slightly dry to get the roots to search but I don't want to water deprive it at this early vulnerable stage. Will I be ok to keep it continually moist?
I moved all plants indoors last night due to the wind advisory and the lower night time temps.
And I hear ya on the night temps. We're flirting with too cold here last night and tonight. Hopefully dodge one more bullet and get another few weeks, at least.
So this is what it's like to be a farmer....
now they are saying tonight is the first freeze of the season...geez...that is a month early...record summer...almost record winter last year...wonder what our winter will be like this year...they are saying it will be dry but I don't remember what the weather people are saying about the overall winter...
looks like I will have bunches of green pods to deal with...but that's life...there's always next year...
This has to be the shortest Fall I can remember, after the shortest Spring. Seriously, WTF? Five weeks of Spring and now it's been 36 days since the last 100 degree day. If it freezes, are you kidding me? 36 days between triple digits and freezing?