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Max Caviar 15-09-2005 01:08 AM

Hot Peppers - Indeterminate or Determinate ??
 
Are hot/chile peppers classified in these terms or is that only a
tomoato thing? And while I'm on the subject, does indeterminate merely
mean that it will reproduce through one growing season, or also that it
is an annual which will carry over through more than 1 season?

Growing habaneros (red savina), jalapenos and seranos and am wondering
what to expect.


TQ 15-09-2005 01:57 AM

"Max Caviar" wrote in message
ups.com...
Are hot/chile peppers classified in these terms or is that only a
tomoato thing? And while I'm on the subject, does indeterminate merely
mean that it will reproduce through one growing season, or also that it
is an annual which will carry over through more than 1 season?

Growing habaneros (red savina), jalapenos and seranos and am wondering
what to expect.


Indeterminant/determinant relate to vine-type plants with tomato being one
example. Indeterminant means the vine will continue to grow whereas a
determinant vine grows to a certain length then stops.



Penelope Periwinkle 15-09-2005 03:01 AM

On 14 Sep 2005 17:08:14 -0700, "Max Caviar"
wrote:


Growing habaneros (red savina), jalapenos and seranos and am wondering
what to expect.


Expect a lot of peppers, those are prolific varieties!


Penelope
--
"Maybe you'd like to ask the Wizard for a heart."
"ElissaAnn"

Jon Shemitz 16-09-2005 06:40 PM

Max Caviar wrote:

an annual which will carry over through more than 1 season?

Growing habaneros (red savina), jalapenos and seranos and am wondering
what to expect.


From personal experience, habaneros and serranos can overwinter and
fruit strongly in subsequent years. (I have a prolific, ten year old
serrano.) No personal experience with jalapenos.

Keep them from freezing or drying out over the winter, then trim
severely at the first sign of new growth in the spring. "Severely" as
in down to the first bud above the root. Old roots are good; old wood
is bad.

--

www.midnightbeach.com

chilli-seeds 17-09-2005 08:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Max Caviar
Are hot/chile peppers classified in these terms or is that only a
tomoato thing? And while I'm on the subject, does indeterminate merely
mean that it will reproduce through one growing season, or also that it
is an annual which will carry over through more than 1 season?

Growing habaneros (red savina), jalapenos and seranos and am wondering
what to expect.

Hi, the chillis you have are red hot, the hottest of the bunch. Clip them at the end of the season and keep warm over winter do not over water and they will produce earlier and more.
http://www.chileseeds.co.uk

Max Caviar 19-09-2005 08:12 PM

Thanks for the responses folks. I'm in Zone 23 so I'm assuming
freezing won't be too much of a problem. But the Red Savina is
unfortunately just getting going at this late date.

Jon Shemitz wrote:
Max Caviar wrote:

an annual which will carry over through more than 1 season?

Growing habaneros (red savina), jalapenos and seranos and am wondering
what to expect.


From personal experience, habaneros and serranos can overwinter and
fruit strongly in subsequent years. (I have a prolific, ten year old
serrano.) No personal experience with jalapenos.

Keep them from freezing or drying out over the winter, then trim
severely at the first sign of new growth in the spring. "Severely" as
in down to the first bud above the root. Old roots are good; old wood
is bad.

--

www.midnightbeach.com




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