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Old May 7, 2012   #31
John3
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Cherry sweet peppers and Cherry hot peppers (the op kind) - Sweet and Mild Banana peppers - Green Bell peppers - Cayenne peppers long thin ( use these by packing in white vinegar then pour onto greens and eat with cornbread).
The Cherry sweet and hot peppers haven't grown in awhile but found seeds this year to grow and save seeds from.
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Old May 7, 2012   #32
roper2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kath View Post
A couple years ago Brokenbar answered a question I had asked as to whether Marconi (Red) was the same as Giant Marconi. She said that Giant Marconi was unique and that it was even larger than Marconi Red. I planned to try Giant Marconi before I found out how much I liked Slonovo Uvo and Palanacko Kudo. kath
Giant Marconi is a hybrid and larger than Red Marconi. Red Marconi is op. I have
grown both.
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Old May 7, 2012   #33
kath
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roper2008 View Post
Giant Marconi is a hybrid and larger than Red Marconi. Red Marconi is op. I have
grown both.
Ohh...wasn't aware GM was a hybrid. I'm looking to permanently replace Carmen F1 because I'm tired of buying hybrid seeds.
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Old May 24, 2012   #34
muskymojo
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For sweet, Jimmy Nardello is probably my favorite. I love the look of them, and they taste even better.

I'm a big fan of superhots from Trinidad. My favorite is 7 Pot Yellow. Very beautiful pods, and plenty HOT with a lemony pineapple flavor.
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Old May 27, 2012   #35
Steve Magruder
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For hot peppers, I love serrano, as it's the perfect pepper ingredient for my homemade pico de gallo. For sweet peppers, I don't have wide exposure, but I love the aroma and versatility of yellow bell.
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Old May 28, 2012   #36
jamserg
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Love sweet peppers (mainly for stuffing, fresh too) but haven't had much success growing them - 1-2 per plant, so don't have a favorite yet. My favorite hot is a ghost pepper (Naga Bhut Jolokia). Love it but difficult to grow. Have 20 beautiful plants now but will be lucky to get a few ripe peppers. Slonovo uvo looks very tasty to try next year, if get seeds somehow.
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Old May 28, 2012   #37
kath
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Quote:
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Slonovo uvo looks very tasty to try next year, if get seeds somehow.
I'll offer seeds if I can save enough bagged ones. FCFS, though.

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Old May 28, 2012   #38
stonysoilseeds
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i like hungarian hot wax for frying with onions i also like the praprika peppers i havent dried them but love stuffing them and ho chi minh is a favorite hot one ive tried growing habaneros but nights seem to cool here to get any
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Old May 28, 2012   #39
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I tried manzanos for the first time this year and just love them. I don't know how much success I'll have with them, but I'm going to put a couple of plants in pots so I can extend the season if I have to.
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Old May 28, 2012   #40
FILMNET
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Kath Pagged ones? Dont, understand?do you mean seeds saved from flowers? Or can we save seeds from ripe fruit? I have both plants growing now the last seeds from him
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Old May 28, 2012   #41
kath
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Quote:
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Kath Pagged ones? Dont, understand?do you mean seeds saved from flowers? Or can we save seeds from ripe fruit? I have both plants growing now the last seeds from him
My pepper plants (hot and sweet) are all in one row, quite close together, so I'll need to bag plants or blossoms to prevent cross-pollination. If I can get fruits to set inside the bags, I'll mark them and wait until they're very ripe and save the seeds.

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Old May 28, 2012   #42
Doug9345
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He means that he is or will bagged the flowers of the plant(s) that he wants seed from, This is to prevent the seed from being a cross of that pepper and what ever other one has flowers at the time. The seed comes from the ripe pepper.
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Old May 28, 2012   #43
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WE crossed in our posting
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Old May 28, 2012   #44
muskymojo
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stonysoilseeds View Post
ive tried growing habaneros but nights seem to cool here to get any
You can grow any pepper you want in NY if you start them early indoors. I usually start my c. chinense in early february and get at least a couple big harvests.
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Old May 29, 2012   #45
beatpoet
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jamserg View Post
Love sweet peppers (mainly for stuffing, fresh too) but haven't had much success growing them - 1-2 per plant, so don't have a favorite yet. My favorite hot is a ghost pepper (Naga Bhut Jolokia). Love it but difficult to grow. Have 20 beautiful plants now but will be lucky to get a few ripe peppers. Slonovo uvo looks very tasty to try next year, if get seeds somehow.
I had a similar problem last year with my sweet peppers, only got two or three from each of my sweet pepper plants, so I'm trying a different variety this year. Trying Corni di Toro to see if I can get better results.

I'm a big fan of spicy foods so I grow mostly hot varieties. Serrano is a favorite, love to use it for salsa verde. Trying a bunch of new varieties this year, only 4 out of 10 plants are one's I've grown before, two of those are Serrano plants. Hoping to find some new favorites this year.
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