Giddy up
Well-Known Member

Not that I know of...there is a lot of quartz in the ground here and half of my soil mix is native dirt...what does that mean?has the plant been near smoky quartz?
that makes senseif it was it would only affect the seeds, not the fruit from the flower.
I agree, I was just wondering why they skipped the black stage...you're right though the red is coming out more than the gold nowRedder is gooder![]()
Means sand. Good drainage, poor nutes.Not that I know of...there is a lot of quartz in the ground here and half of my soil mix is native dirt...what does that mean?
Same genus. Different species. Probably won't happen by itself. Two species of the same genus can be crossed and it does happen all the time in nature. The cross would be denoted by an x after the genus name and the hybrid would be named for the person who hybridized it, for example Capsicum x 'Pinworm'. Hope that helps.View attachment 4004587 Might be a stupid question but...I have some poblanos and yellow bell peppers growing amongst each other...today I noticed some of my poblanos turning a golden green color, when my poblanos have always started turning black about now...did my poblanos get knocked up by a bell pepper? Is that possible? Apologies for the shitty pic
Some farmers plant them in their apple orchards. They flower early and for a long time and will pollinate most apple varieties.In the world of apples, people worry about "the right one" to pollinate their favorite trees...Actually, all they need to do is plant one crabapple.