PIC 1 said:
I hope those Bonda's x Yellow 7's have heaps of oil and are hotter than hell...........
then again, I'm growing them too !.........
Thanks Greg! I think the Bonda-X are almost ready….I'm excited to see yours, too!
chile_freak said:
Wow Gary! Not only are your plants looking fantastic, you are growing some amazing crosses! I will have to give it to Tmudder and Charles, some really good choices for crosses! Yellow 7s and Bonda Ma Jacques already are delicious on their own, so even if it is as tasty as either of the parents you're a winner, And of course there is a chance that they will be even better, win win in my book!
Looking great!
Thanks Paul! The Bonda-X plants are actually pulling ahead of the ChocoNagas, which started out real strong...
Yes, there are some wonderful crosses these days, and Charles seems to just keep coming up with better and better hybrids...
Devv said:
We're up against the same thing, anything red is fair game.
But they go to the Matie's first. Don't know if it's true. They "say" birds don't experience the heat....
Scott, whatever it was that was eating my chiles seems to have moved on FINALLY…the shitheads…It must have been the robins…Anyway, looks like I'm going to get to eat some of those nice Cabe Gendot pods soon...
chile_freak said:
birds have no olfactory sense, and no discernable sense of taste, so they don't really notice the heat. If you hang CDs or other shiny objects on monofilament line from trees or wherever they scare the birds away. When I lived in New Mexico, I had a pair of damn woodpeckers trying to nest in my roof, and of course they were endangered, so I couldn't poison or shoot them! So the wildlife guy told me to hang several CDs from monofilament the spin in the wind and the sun reflects off of them and scares them
Thanks Paul!
Noah Yates said:
Awesome Glog windchicken!!!! Thanks for the referral devv.
Thanks Noah! That GIF is too good!
Devv said:
I leave the birds alone, they may damage a few tom's, but they eat the grasshoppers. So I'll share
Just wish they would let a grape ripen. Ah CD's!
The birds that beat up my beds and pods are my wife's happy little friends, so I can't hurt them…or scare them off, even...
compmodder26 said:
Plants looking great Gary! Love the look on those NagaBrains. And I've been able to score some free RCW too! Got a local tree company, dumping their loads on a construction site just down the street from me (presumably illegally). I've been surveying their loads and found a HUGE pile that is pure hardwood and seems to be mainly from branches. In the middle of the pile, there is a BUNCH of white rot fungus already growing. I built a new bed in my backyard with it. By next spring, it should be perfect.
Awesome Brian! I think you are going to be very pleased with that bed...
Trippa said:
Things are looking great Gary. Love the looks of the Bonda x Y7 and the Cabe Gendot. How is it gowing in the heat of summer?? Better then the other var. of pubescens?
Thanks Trippa! As I mentioned above, the birds that were hammering my Cabe Gendot pods seem to have moved on to screw with someone else's garden, so the pods they set are all ripening up nicely…And I have to say, I LOVE the chiles! Right now in my garden I have super hots, jalapeños, New Mexico chiles, baccatums, etc., etc., all loaded with fresh pods, but I find myself going back again and again to my Cabe Gendot plants—The the flavor, the ripping heat, the crunchy juiciness…Dude, it's sex in my mouth—if that's not too much information—I find them to be quite a bit hotter than Chile Manzano, the only other pubescens I've ever tasted….And yes, they are doing very well in the Louisiana climate. In fact, they are still setting blossoms and fresh fruit. These are some of the first pods to ripen, so they are smaller than the others that are still on the plants (sorry about my dirty fingernails…I was pulling weeds):