Here is the Harold St. Barts Pepper, Capsicum chinense, Scoville units: 150,000 to 250,000+ SHU. The Harold St. Barts Pepper originates from Saint Barthélemy island and was named after Harold Langlois. They are a green then yellow colored after ripening blocky habanero type. They measure up to 2.1+ inches across, thin walled and very hot. The plants can reach 36 inches tall and produces dozens of peppers per plant! Peppers are very very hot and tangy but smooth while very chewy and can be dried. These go great in salads, rice & beans, stuffed and salsa! We found this to be a very a productive variety and easy to grow in northern climates. Always fruits first year and can over winter. Plants can live for many years in pots and tend to stay around 24 inches tall and ornate but needs support. A must grow for any collector! Open pollinated, mid to late season, yellow color, perennial, easy grow, 73 to 100+ days to overwinter for many years. LOT# 4 SEC1C TAG# 180-2022
Harold St. Barts Pepper
Quantity
10 Seeds
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GERMINATION INFO
Peppers require a long warm season to produce fruits, taking from 58 to 100 days to mature. Although grown as an annual throughout most of the country, peppers survive as perennials in U.S. Department of Agriculture plant hardiness zones 9b, 10 and 11. Ornamental, sweet and hot peppers all require the same conditions for germination and fruit production.
1. Start pepper seeds six to eight weeks before you plan to plant them outside. Use planting trays or pots with drainage holes and a separate water tray to allow excess moisture to drain.
2. Wash planting trays or pots with hot water and soap. Mix nine parts water with one part bleach and rinse the containers with the mixture to remove any bacteria and fungus.
3. Fill the planting container with seed starting mix. Use a packaged soilless blend or make your own using one-third peat, one-third sand and one-third vermiculite.
4. Broadcast the pepper seeds across the seed starting medium. Cover them with a light layer of the medium about twice as thick as the seed width.
5. Mist the planted container with room temperature water until the starting mix feels damp all the way through. Cover the tray or pots with a humidity dome or plastic film.
6. Place the planters in a warm location. Pepper seeds need temperatures around 70 to 80 degrees F to germinate. Use a seed starting heat mat with thermostat to ensure consistent and accurate temperatures.
7. Check the peppers daily for moisture levels and seedlings. Mist as needed to keep the soilless mix moist. Germination takes seven to 14 days for most varieties of peppers. Remove the plastic cover when seedlings appear.