beervoid
Hophead & Pellet Rubber
This might be true for the short term but they do not live up as well as canned neipa's. The caps on bottles leak oxygen no matter what and oxygen absorbing caps absorb aroma.Welcome! I'm one of the few bottlers on this site (most seem to keg), so I'm happy to share what I've learned about bottling this style. My NEIPA's don't oxidize anymore, and in fact taste best after about 5 weeks in the bottle.
First and foremost, oxygen is your enemy. I would be way more worried about oxidizing your beer than dry hop lengths.
This means do not transfer to secondary, and do not transfer to the bottling bucket. Just bottle right from the primary fermenter into bottles with sugar in them. I bottle into bombers and use 2 Cooper's carbonation drops, but you could also use regular bottling sugar.
You don't have to worry about the first dry hop, because you'll have plenty of co2 that will force out the oxygen. For the second one, though, I purge using a can of wine preserver spray (about $7 on the internet).
Let me know if you have any questions, and while they mean well, don't let anyone tell you that you can't bottle a NEIPA if you take some simple steps to keep oxygen away from your beer!
I've had multiple examples of commercialy brewed and bottled new england ipa's. Not one of them had held up well and came even remotely close to the flavor of canned examples.
Light plays a role here as well. I recommend wax to close it and wrapping them in something that blocks the light if not stored dark.