Any suggestions on some good hot pepper varieties?
Thanks in advance.

Wow, thanks for the great info! I have been thinking twice about trying tomatoes this year, but I will look at those links and see if I think I should try again, given the time I will have. Really appreciate the heads up.rainbowgardener wrote:Hi and welcome!!
"fruit Tomatoes grew like crazy, but didn't flower, even with careful pollination). " Did you mean the tomatoes didn't fruit? They couldn't have been pollinated if they hadn't flowered.
Not setting fruit could have to do with light intensity --you did say this is indoor hydro, right? Tomatoes need a lot of light to set fruit (some varieties more than others - check out some of applestar's indoor winter tomato threads).
The other issue might be nutrients. Tomatoes are heavy feeders, so in a hydro situation, would require lots of nutrients. They need different nutrient combinations at different times in their life cycle:
https://www.uvm.edu/vtvegandberry/factsh ... rition.pdf
https://www.yara.us/agriculture/crops/to ... l-summary/
imafan26 wrote:Pepper varieties
Anaheim. not very hot but good for chile rellenos and stuffing or frying
Hungarian Wax peppper- good for frying med hot, fruity
Serrano- good for salsa much more stable heat than Jalapenos and slightly hotter than them.
Giant Marconi- good frying pepper not hot. good in salads too, very versatile
Fushimi sweet- sweet Asian pepper used in stir fries and Asian stews
Cayenne-good heat
Thai dragon, or Thai hot
Tabasco ( Hawaiian favorite for everything)
Banana sweet pepper
Czechoslovakian Black Pepper- good combination of flavor, color and heat and very strong plant on in a compact bush
Corno d'toro
Red Knight- Improved King Arthur type pepper.
Chinese Giant bell- Heirloom
Chocolate bell
If you had a lot of leaves on the tomato and not much fruit. Did you prune or pinch the tomatoes? The nitrogen level may have been a little too high as Rainbow said, tomatoes use different nutrients at different stages.
Well, I have one small room where I'm doing the hydro. I'm just growing for 2 people, so I like doing a fair variety of not more than 1 or 2 plant types each. I've got about a 7 or 8 foot span from the shelving for the hydro to the ceiling and have some good homemade lights, trellising & stuff. The room gets a fair amount of sun from two windows during the day, though one is North facing and the other is South East facing. So maybe make sure the tomatoes are set up where they'll get the most amount of light and add some extra lighting there. I gave them probably a little less than I did the peppers, come to think on it...they grew so fast I was constantly having to adjust the lights, so..applestar wrote:Is there any limitation on height/size or lighting? Is this indoor?
If indoor -- Did you use an electric toothbrush to help pollinate the tomato blossoms? Apparently peppers are more promiscuous and can self pollinate without mechanical aid, but will still benefit from e-brushing with increased production. In my experience, hot peppers grown indoors need less amount of light than tomatoes to bloom and set fruit.
applestar wrote:Cotton swab is not actually a good tool for tomatoes and peppers. Pollen produced by the anthers of tomato and peppers pollinate own blossoms, though when transferred by small insects, they can also pollinate other blossoms. The blossoms have evolved to release pollen when buzzing bees visit, and the falling pollen land on the stigma of the same blossom. The stigma of tomato blossoms more often than not DOES NOT even protrude from the anther cone until after the same blossom is already releasing pollen and has been pollinated already.
When you touch the electric toothbrush to the top of the flower stem in good light, you will actually see pollen fall out of the down-facing blossoms like snow (or fairy dust). After a while you'll become familiar with when during the day they would most actively release pollen in your particular growing condition.
Outside during the growing season, I have watched bumble bees cling To the blossoms and THEN buzz to release and gather the falling pollen. Sometimes, I become aware of the bee activity nearby BECAUSE of the persistent intermittent buzz as they fly from blossom to blossom, buzzing at each one.