Jalapeno chillis are part of the Capsicum annuum family of chillis, annuum's are very hard to over winter(would not bother trying to over winter any chilli that are part of the annuum family), been growing chillis way over 25 years, i only ever over winter the Chinese-type of chillies, these are the hots/super hots usually, like my 10 year old over wintered Fatalii, Habanero, Scotch bonnet, Trinidad scorpion, Pepper X, 7-Pot, loads more, any chilli that is over 250,000 Scoville are usually Chinese type.Didn't grow any superhots this year, feeling the fomo did grow Jalapenos, Padron, Aleppo and Balalaika this year! I used a diesel heater this year to get my seedlings in the greenhouse earlier but tbh not sure if it was worth the additional effort!
Yeh, as they don't need a early start really, so just grow fresh each year, hots/super hots need a good long summer, so they really benefit from being over wintered.Ahhhh good to know. So rinse and repeat on things like jalapenos and anything that is mild? Gotcha.
Super hots are the hardest to grow, but good seeds usually sprout ok, i am thinking bad compost myself, could be the seeds thou(depending where you got them from), if there like just 4 inches tall, after a long growing season, just chuck them and start again next year, i don't think there worth over wintering, they need to be a mature plant to be over wintered really, i suggest you buy some plug plant chilli's, let the nursery do all the hard work, then grow them on yourself, with good compost from a garden centre or nursery to be sure, good growing guides on most chilli nursery websites.
https://southdevonchillifarm.co.uk/
https://seaspringplants.co.uk/product-category/chilli-plug-plants/
Looks like I know what I'll be doing next year. Thanks!
when the sun light gets less and the days darker thats when things ripen cause of less sun. we probably got 2 maybe 3 weeks before frost kicks in.Just had one jalapeno on the grow this year. Not a bad haul but nowhere near some of my bigger crops in previous years. Didn't have the time to dedicate to it this year but hope to get back to it next year.
Getting colder now though so will probably resign it to being indoors for it, it had a big growth spurt in July/August when we were having those really hot days.
One thing i've never been able to do successfully is overwinter them.
Does anyone have a fool proof way of doing it as i'm thinking of harvesting this in a week or so? A couple are darkening and probably going to start going red but not sure weve many sunny days left in the locker.
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Yea I’ve been growing a long time too, I don’t over winter not worth the hassle but I own a seed company called Grown Local so we do a lot of trials throughout the year the diesel heater is to get a head start up here in sunny Scotland!Jalapeno chillis are part of the Capsicum annuum family of chillis, annuum's are very hard to over winter(would not bother trying to over winter any chilli that are part of the annuum family), been growing chillis way over 25 years, i only ever over winter the Chinese-type of chillies, these are the hots/super hots usually, like my 10 year old over wintered Fatalii, Habanero, Scotch bonnet, Trinidad scorpion, Pepper X, 7-Pot, loads more, any chilli that is over 250,000 Scoville are usually Chinese type.