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A tight squeeze?

Started by tim, September 10, 2006, 19:46:43

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tim

Why do you never see them in the s/market?

tim


Spruance

Hi Tim,

From what I can gather, supermarkets aren't interested in fruit and veg if they don't conform to strict size and shape restrictions. That's how we've ended up with straight cucumbers, near straight bananas and almost square apples. ::)

Spruance
You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. - Abraham Lincoln (attributed)
16th president of US (1809 - 1865)

supersprout

I've seen those little fellas in the organic market in Downham Market tim! ::)

tricia

Something to do with stupid EU regulations?

Tricia

katynewbie

 ;D

My Bell Boy pepper (yup, singular) looks like that! I am glad we do not see them in supermarkets, mine has a unique personality and I am almost afraid to eat it! If these wobbly, knobbly, gorgeous things were in the supermarket mine would not be such a novelty!

;)


tim

But do 'the growers' ever get a squidged one?? Mine always get stuck in the crutch of branches.

muddy boots

Hi Tim, question if you don't mind.  I was given a chilli/pepper plant earlier, probably about early July.  It looked rather sickly - certainly need good watering.  Repotted it and watered and it perked up.  Now, it has a couple of flowers. whitish and lots of other little pods threatening to show flowers.  It's in the greenhouse - what do you think is the chance of getting any chillis/peppers at this stage of the game please?

tim

If you're in a favoured position, & it's indoors - possibly?

muddy boots

Thanks, I will keep my fingers crossed!  Is very sheltered and very sunny.  If not, will just have to wait until next year when I sow my own.  ;D

Curryandchips

Muddy, if the chillie plant has perked up, it will overwinter if kept indoors, then should fruit next year, since I believe chillie plants are perennial ...?
The impossible is just a journey away ...

Barnowl

The ones I've kept indoors on a warm and sunny windowsill usually go on flowering and fruiting until at least December.


(They usually then get something like red spider mite and I prune them back to a stump)

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