Cachucha Pepper
Capsicum chinense
How to sow cachucha pepper: Direct seed indoors, transplant seedlings outside after hardening off
Sun requirement for cachucha pepper: Plant in Full Sun
Nobody is growing this yet. You could be the first!
Capiscum is a genus of flowering plants in the nightshade family Solanaceae that produces peppers. The Capiscum genus contains 20-27 species of peppers which vary in color, shape, size, and heat. 5 species are domesticated. Most peppers are green when unripe and change color as the fruit matures. The fruit of most species contains capsaicin, which gives hot peppers their spiciness. Bell peppers (Capsicum annuum) are an exception: they do not contain capsaicin due to a recessive gene, and are therefore not spicy. The Scoville scale is used to measure the relative heat of peppers. Bell peppers have a rating of 0-25 Scoville Heat Units (SHU), jalapenos are between 2,500-10,000 SHU. All peppers, regardless of species, prefer a long, warm growing season and well-drained soil high in organic matter. Seeds can be started indoors 8-10 weeks before hardening off and transplanting. In cooler climates, it can be preferable to grow peppers in containers indoors to extend the growing season and prevent frost from killing plants. Peppers have an upright growing habit and can benefit from staking to help the plant support the fruits.
Predictions
Annual
living and reproducing in a single year or lessVideo
Photos
Cachucha pepper plantings
Cachucha pepper harvests
Crop Map
Only plantings by members who have set their locations are shown on this map.
What people are saying about cachucha peppers
Nobody has posted about cachucha peppers yet.
Sign in or sign up to post your tips and experiences growing cachucha peppers.
History
Alternate names
See who's planted cachucha peppers
Cachucha pepper harvests
Nobody has harvested this crop yet.
Find cachucha pepper seeds
There are no seeds available to trade on Growstuff right now.
- Purchase seeds via Ebay
- Sign in or sign up to list your seeds to trade.