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Old May 12, 2016   #16
habitat_gardener
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Originally Posted by bitterwort View Post
One of those fell into my shopping cart too, whispering something about saving seeds....
That was my first thought too!

I can still try growing it this year...
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Old May 12, 2016   #17
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If someone finds seed please let us know. Im wanting to grow these with hopes of getting my kids to eat peppers.
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Old May 12, 2016   #18
Fred Hempel
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Joke.

It looks like a mutation similar to the one(s) that cause striping in tomatoes.

Since the leaves on the plants look normal, I would guess it is not some kind of chimera that must be vegetatively propogated.

I bet it is heritable.

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Is that a thing or was that a joke?
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Old May 12, 2016   #19
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Have you tried cutting peppers in half and putting ice cream inside?


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If someone finds seed please let us know. Im wanting to grow these with hopes of getting my kids to eat peppers.
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Old May 12, 2016   #20
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It's got to be a hybrid, right? I just can't see it being open pollinated.
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Old May 12, 2016   #21
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Originally Posted by Fred Hempel View Post
Have you tried cutting peppers in half and putting ice cream inside?
I just might do that if they dont like it after that then i suppose there is no hope for them. Its funny because my daughter loves the salsa i make with Carolina Reaper peppers cut into it but wont touch a bell pepper. Im still working on my son to like peppers as well as tomatoes. Its sad because hes my right hand man in the garden but wont eat the maters.
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Old May 12, 2016   #22
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It's got to be a hybrid, right? I just can't see it being open pollinated.
Thats what im thinking but i will still grow it and try to capture the striping either way. Like i need another project.
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Old May 12, 2016   #23
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Sprouts Farmers Market grocery store chain carries these peppers. At least the ones in Northern CA do.
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Old May 12, 2016   #24
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Good info, Andrey. Thanks.

The peppers are all over the US. First seen here in Texas, then in several places in New England & NE, then SF area?, then PNW, etc.


Don't believe anyone that offers seeds unless they say that they got them from a bought pepper. The propagators certainly won't be offering seeds. So no independent info on whether they grow true from seed, but expect that they will.
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Old May 12, 2016   #25
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It might be a hybrid, but I don't assume so. Green Zebra isn't a hybrid.
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Old May 12, 2016   #26
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If this pepper was discovered in a glasshouse 2 yrs ago, it is unlikely that it is a hybrid, as 2 years would not be enough time to create 2 true-breeding parental lines that were striped.

This assumes that, like in tomatoes, the striping is recessive. If the striping is dominant, Enjoya (the stripey pepper) could be a hybrid.

My bet is that it is PVPd and/or they have tried to patent it.
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Old May 13, 2016   #27
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I agree with Fred, it couln't be a hybrid if the story behide it is true.
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Old May 13, 2016   #28
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I too agree that it probably isn't a hybrid. Thank you for the links you posted earlier in this thread Andrey.
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Old May 13, 2016   #29
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That's great if it's OP. Although if so I think it was an unwise business decision for them not to wait to make a hybrid. Even if they got a pvp, Intellectual Property law is about money. The idea is that someone else is making money by stealing your brand. The punishment is almost always 3x profit. For people like us, who just give each other seeds, the worst that could happen is a judge's order to stop doing so, but no one is going to spend the money to get that order; it's not worth it.
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Old May 21, 2016   #30
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Quote:
Originally Posted by heirloomtomaguy View Post
Thats what im thinking but i will still grow it and try to capture the striping either way. Like i need another project.
@heirloomtomaguy, I can share some seeds with you. Just send me a PM with your address.

image.jpg

Last edited by kchd..; May 21, 2016 at 09:40 AM.
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