Description
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Habanero History
Habanero chili originated from the Amazon and spread to Mexico. Spanish colonists disseminated this pepper to other areas of the world, becoming so popular that taxonomists at the time mistook the pepper's origin for China (where the term Capsicum chinense came from) the Chinese pepper. The habanero is named after the Cuban city of La Habana, known in English as Havana, because it used to feature heavily in trading there. The largest producer of the habanero pepper comes from the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico. It's incredibly popular across Mexico and much of Central and South America. Habaneros are an integral part of Yucatecan food, accompanying most dishes, either as itself or purée or salsa.
In 1999 the Habanero pepper was listed by the Guinness World Records as the world's hottest pepper. Since then it's no longer the the hottest pepper. The hottest pepper in the world was the Carolina Reaper since 2013 but not anymore. On August 23, 2023 Pepper X is now the hottest pepper in the world.
Habanero Hot Peppers (Capsicum chinense) Heirloom, Open-pollinated, Non GMO seeds
Growing & Planting Habanero Hot Pepper Seeds
Planting SeedsStart Habanero pepper seeds indoors in peat pots about 8 weeks before the last frost. Sow seeds about 1/2" deep and keep soil at 80-85F until germination. Provide natural sunlight or use a LED grow light for 12-16 hours a day. When the outside temperature reaches 70-75F, harden off your plants gradually before transplanting seedlings outside. After danger of last frost, transplant your pepper plant seedlings to garden in rich soil and full sun with about 16" between pepper plants and about 36" between rows.
Growing
Peppers grow very well in containers or raised beds. These pepper plants will grow about 36"-48" tall. Always remember too, you can always grow peppers indoors as well 365 days a year. Just certain extra steps are required versus growing them outdoors such as lighting and pollination. When growing outdoors lastly apply a generous amount of mulch to conserve moisture and control weeds during the growing season.
Harvesting
Harvest hot peppers when you prefer. Please note however the longer the peppers mature on the plant, the hotter the peppers will be. If you want to encourage continuous fruiting always pick the peppers while still in the green stage. This way the pepper plants will keep on producing. By letting the peppers mature past the green stage will signal the plant to stop producing. By continuously picking sweet peppers you'll get an extended harvest.
Growing Hot Peppers at Home
Grow your own food from home and start vegetable gardening today! Growing garden vegetables & fruit at home indoors, outdoors, in your own backyard or on your patio in containers is a very rewarding hobby with many health benefits too. Know how your food is grown and start feeding your family fresh vegetables and fruit at home. Save money and taste the freshness your garden can provide for your family.
Try growing your own hot pepper plants today! We have Habanero Hot Pepper seeds for sale!
If you're looking to buy hot pepper seeds or sweet pepper seeds online in Moncton, NB, Canada, we can help! Furthermore be sure to check out our other vegetable seeds and fruit seeds that we have to offer. Follow us on our Facebook page too, so that you always stay up to date for new vegetable seeds we offer, contests and any sales we have going on!
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