Re: [CH] What causes pods to turn ripe?

JohnT (Love2troll@kc.rr.com)
Wed, 21 Jun 2006 14:22:10 -0500

Thanks guys!

Looking forward to seeing both of you again this September.

jt


----- Original Message ----- 
From: NECM
To: jim
Cc: JohnT ; chile-heads@globalgarden.com
Sent: Monday, June 19, 2006 7:21 PM
Subject: Re: [CH] What causes pods to turn ripe?


Hi jt & JimC!
Well I'll express an observation I'll prove or either of you can prove
at Open Fields this year. Find two Capsicum plants next to each other
that have a fairly even number of unripe fruit (after all ripe fruit
are picked) in the Field of Dreams (I think one each C. annuum, C.
chinense & a C. bacatuum should do). Dig one of each out as early as
possibile, Friday morning would be great. Stick the roots in water &
rinse off all that Indiana growing media (CLAY to us northeners).
Leave "yanked" plant in direct sunlight, if we have any this year,
untill it wilts badly then stick the rooys in water for an hour or so.
Repeat untill we leave the Field of Screams & compare the "yanked"
plant to the one still in ground.....

NECM


On 6/14/06, jim <jim@mail.wildpepper.com> wrote:
> Plant stress can do it- plants that have been damaged by breaking over 
> will
> ripen the pods almost immediately and this is irrespective of day length 
> or
> anything else.  Ethylene oxide is the ripening gas and is used to 'force
> ripe' produce picked green & shipped in closed box cars so that it looks
> ripe when it hits distant markets.  Washington apples sold on the east 
> coast
> would be an example of this.
>
> His explanation doesn't account for different varieties ripening at
> different times.  Cayennes are July, Japs August, & Habs September.
>
> -Jim C
> Mild to Wild(R)
> http://www.StepUpForCharity.org
>


-- 
Is this where I'm suppose to attach some witty little ditty?


-- 
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.394 / Virus Database: 268.9.0/367 - Release Date: 6/16/2006