Careful Alex or you may be descended upon by a wild pack of chilehead eating Canadians! hehehehe I'm not a winter denial type except when I have to shovel the driveway for the third time in one week. Gaz ----- Original Message ----- From: <lipant@rogers.com> To: "Alex Silbajoris" <asilbajo@hotmail.com>; <chile-heads@globalgarden.com> Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 11:57 AM Subject: Re: Re: [CH] Canadian Savina > Is there a Chile challenge in there somewhere, Alex? > > Some parts of Canada are further south than some of the U.S. Of course, those of us who are total "winter denial" types live in condo's and grow indoors, in our solariums, year round. > Karen Stober, your lemondrop seeds have turned into a prolific bunch of seedlings! Thanks again. > > > > From: "Alex Silbajoris" <asilbajo@hotmail.com> > > Date: 2002/10/23 Wed PM 03:28:40 GMT > > To: chile-heads@globalgarden.com > > Subject: Re: Re: [CH] Canadian Savina > > > > > > > > >From: "Gary Bellinger" <yesgaz@itcanada.com> > > > > >The temp outside in the winter has nothing to do with > > >the heat tolerance of Canadian Chileheads. > > > > > > Hmm, but what about the sunlight hours? I'm thinking of the huge vegetables > > they can grow in an Alaskan summer ... if that applied to peppers, imagine a > > hab as big as an avacado. > > > > Of course, to grow in Canada, you have to mark the little seedling tags in > > English on one side and French on the other... > > > > - A > > > > > > _________________________________________________________________ > > Choose an Internet access plan right for you -- try MSN! > > http://resourcecenter.msn.com/access/plans/default.asp > > > > >