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#1
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Gardener's Question Time - Chilli or Triffid?
Anybody know what this plant is please?
It grew in a pot in which had been sown seeds of Bolivian Hairy Chilli, the only thing that grew. It doesn't look particularly like a chilli, more like a potato plant. A deadly nightshade? It's about 3" tall. |
#2
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Chilli or Triffid
Say it with flowers: send her a Triffid!
Stephen. PS- Drug Squad will call for a social chat and a smoke about 6am Monday morning.
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Life is just a hallucination caused by breathing oxygen, because when you stop breathing it, everything goes away |
#3
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Based on the 2nd and 3rd photo. a type of squash or zucchini. The flowering portion is where the fruit would start to appear and grow.
__________________
"We must make our mistakes quickly"
Major General George Alan Vasey CB, CBE, DSO and Bar New Guinea 1942 |
#4
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It's these Achocha, "Aztec cucumber"plants that cause that kind of confusion........
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#5
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Quote:
So it looks like I've picked up a rogue squash type beast from somewhere. |
#6
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Think I've sussed it, these husks have formed - tomatillo?
I'd sown some but thought I'd given them all away. Not sure how it managed to infiltrate pots of chilli's but I reckon that's it, tomatillo. |
#7
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Ok, so what is a tomatillo?
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#8
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The easiest answer is to post this wiki link
https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=to...obile&ie=UTF-8 Doesn't look like I'll have enough fruit from this one plant to make a bowl of salsa. |
#9
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It looks like a tomatillo. I grow them for one of my hot sauces.
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#10
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Yes, it has that physalis type fruit forming. Tomatillo were amongst a number of hot sauce type ingredients I sowed including green fish, yellow banana, Satan's kiss, Peter pepper, hairy giant Bolivian (that one was a complete fail), Peruvian lemon drop, Trinidad yellow perfumed and a few other chilli's.
A bit of an experiment, growing things that were "different" but not just wastefull novelty. Most plants (hundreds) given away, and despite meticulous labeling in perma Sharpie most labels lost as the sun bleached the ink out within a day ( although other Sharpie labels have lasted years). Done for fun rather than maximum cropping this year, next year I'll be a little more sensible. Last edited by leigh kitchen; 22-09-18 at 12:09 PM. |
#11
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"Return of The Triffid".
Well, a different one appeared this year, anyone know what his is please? Long, arching stems a few feet long, the white and maroon shrimp like flowers seem familiar but I can't place it. |
#13
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Right, thanks - I'm thinking I sowed some of the seeds a year or two ago, nothing came of them - until this one appeared in the front hedge.
I have two types of Siberian Honeysuckle, their fruits are edible, I don't think the fruit of the Himalayan is, I must've bought the seed as an oddity. An invasive one as I recall. |
#14
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If I recall correctly, you can eat the berries - although I would check that before you do !! The birds love them and they make a significant mess as a result of eating the berries. It is invasive and it's possible that it has self seeded through bird droppings.
I would get rid of it if it was in our garden
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#15
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Yep, sounds an idea.
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