Heat Tolerant Peppers
- Wildcat82
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- Location: San Antonio Texas
Heat Tolerant Peppers
Jalapenos are usually touted as being one of the most heat tolerant peppers. However, it seems that when the summer heat kicks in, I usually get only little 1-2 inch nubs from my jalapenos. On the other hand, Cubanelle's seem to tolerate high temperatures better and keep producing 4-5 inchers.
What is the best heat tolerant pepper you've grown?
What is the best heat tolerant pepper you've grown?
- worth1
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- Location: 25 miles southeast of Waterloo Texas
Re: Heat Tolerant Peppers
Several but can't remember all the names.
Habanero is one and pepperoncini serrano Corno de Toro and so on.
Ghost pepper not heat tolerant at all
Habanero is one and pepperoncini serrano Corno de Toro and so on.
Ghost pepper not heat tolerant at all
Worth
25 miles southeast of Waterloo Texas.
You can't argue with a closed mind.
You might as well be arguing with a cat.
25 miles southeast of Waterloo Texas.
You can't argue with a closed mind.
You might as well be arguing with a cat.
- pepperhead212
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- Location: Woodbury, NJ
Re: Heat Tolerant Peppers
It doesn't get quite as hot here as where you are (
), but it seems to me that most chinense peppers are heat resistant, as well as those Thai peppers, which seem to increase output, rather than be badly affected by heat. I usually have good results with jalapeños, and one I have had the best with is a hybrid, unfortunately, so it can't be saved - Jalafuego. I have to cover my jalapeños, up to around August 1st, due to pepper maggot flies, so the temp is even hotter in those mini "greenhouses", and other varieties are definitely slowed down, until uncovered.
Here's a photo from one season when I uncovered some Jalafuego plants, showing they had grown about 4' tall, and some of the peppers, and how long they got. I uncovered a few times, to harvest, and those south facing covered Earthboxes gets over 100° on many of those hotter days I have!
Jalafuego, uncovered 7-28 by pepperhead212, on Flickr
I also had some longhorns, fresnos, aleppos, and Hanoi markets growing to the tops of those cages I had over them that year. And probably others.
Pepper plants growing through the tops of the covers 7-28 by pepperhead212, on Flickr

Here's a photo from one season when I uncovered some Jalafuego plants, showing they had grown about 4' tall, and some of the peppers, and how long they got. I uncovered a few times, to harvest, and those south facing covered Earthboxes gets over 100° on many of those hotter days I have!

I also had some longhorns, fresnos, aleppos, and Hanoi markets growing to the tops of those cages I had over them that year. And probably others.

Woodbury, NJ zone 7a/7b
- pondgardener
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- Location: 30 miles southeast of the Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado
Re: Heat Tolerant Peppers
It gets pretty hot here in Southern Colorado and jalapeños, cayennes and habaneros all do well. But I apply pine needle mulch around them.
It's not what you gather, but what you scatter, that tells what kind of life you have lived.
- karstopography
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Re: Heat Tolerant Peppers
Here in South East Texas, Poblanos, Aji Crystal, Cayenne, Anaheim, Tabasco, Jalapeños, Serrano, Pepperoncini all set fruit and do well in the height of summer here.
Photos of peppers all around August 1st, 2022.
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"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden."
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- JRinPA
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Re: Heat Tolerant Peppers
Do you think Jalafuego is really an F1 or do they just call it that for sales? I have seeds saved to F5 or F6 generation...I don't notice much difference; well, I don't notice ANY difference. They are still HOT for a jalapeno and still big and productive.
- pepperhead212
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Re: Heat Tolerant Peppers
I saved Jalafuego seeds once, and started one, and it seemed totally different - I always try things like that once, to see.
Woodbury, NJ zone 7a/7b