Your peppers please!

buckaclark

Well-Known Member
good exercise...i'm just gonna run a couple of 4x8 raised beds and maybe a few 5 gallon buckets, not much more room than that, thinking 4 tomatoes, 4 peppers, some cucumbers, and i'm gonna try to grow a freakin big ass pumpkin this year, when it gets going good, i'm going to dose it with Giberelic acid...last time i did that the pumpkin got up over 50 pounds before the fucking bears ate one side of it out....and still had two months to grow. this year i'm going to spread some moth balls around, hopefully that will deter the bears
We should be in similar zones .7 here in central Va
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
I use a landscape fabric and a weed burner with a soup can to make holes on top of finished beds.Plant with bulb planter.Watering is Pita when foliage covers everything.Have a waterer with a literal waterline to inject near the stalk under the fabric.I must find a better system.
i haven't tried them outside, but i use blumats inside and like them. i may get some more and try them outside this year
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
good exercise...i'm just gonna run a couple of 4x8 raised beds and maybe a few 5 gallon buckets, not much more room than that, thinking 4 tomatoes, 4 peppers, some cucumbers, and i'm gonna try to grow a freakin big ass pumpkin this year, when it gets going good, i'm going to dose it with Giberelic acid...last time i did that the pumpkin got up over 50 pounds before the fucking bears ate one side of it out....and still had two months to grow. this year i'm going to spread some moth balls around, hopefully that will deter the bears
Ga3 on pumpkins? Hmm, might have to play around with that. The lady always wants me to grow pumpkins. We never eat them she just wants the big ones for decoration.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
I planted pepper and tomato seeds a couple three weeks ago. I've cupped up about a dozen of the tomatoes, and just now getting the first sprouts on the peppers. Hatch and Mini Sweet are the most represented at this point. I'll cup a few of them the next camp night. As soon as I think they are tough enough, I'll put them in the underground green house.

The Mammoth Jalapeno I started about this time last year did real well.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
No pictures, but I cupped up about two dozen pepper plants last night. Mostly Hatch with lesser amounts of Cayenne, Cali Wonder Bells and Mini Sweets.
 

Polyuro

Well-Known Member
Hello everyone. Just recently started an indoor vegetable herbs room and seem to be having a problem germinating my peppers

Never done this before most of my other veggies r up but none of the peppers. Do they need heat mats, more time or someone other than me lol?
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
Hello everyone. Just recently started an indoor vegetable herbs room and seem to be having a problem germinating my peppers

Never done this before most of my other veggies r up but none of the peppers. Do they need heat mats, more time or someone other than me lol?
I did pepper and tomato at the same time (in the trays above) and the peppers took about a week longer than the tomatoes. I've been in the 70's, so no need for heat pads here.
 

buckaclark

Well-Known Member
Hello everyone. Just recently started an indoor vegetable herbs room and seem to be having a problem germinating my peppers

Never done this before most of my other veggies r up but none of the peppers. Do they need heat mats, more time or someone other than me lol?
Peppers take quite a bit longer IMO almost twice as long to start. 8-10 weeks vs 4-6 for Tomatoes.
 

Northwood

Well-Known Member
Finally popped. My first pepper plant ever. Scotch bonnet.
Great to hear you're now the proud parent of a scotch bonnet!

Scotch bonnets are a cultivar of the Capsicum chinense species which can be stubborn to germinate. The optimal temperature for germination is 85°F (30°C) with any of those types, so a heat mat definitely speeds things up. Below 80°F they can take weeks to germinate. I almost threw out my planted Ghost tray (also a C. chinense species) after 3 weeks of waiting and seeing nothing. I didn't use a heat mat. Glad I waited another week or two. Lol
 

VincenzioVonHook

Well-Known Member
Popped a few Peppers four or so weeks ago. No idea what they are, or what I'm doing as they were from a random seed pack. Hoping there's some semi hots in there. Popped the seedlings in a 2x2 with a 120w quantum board for two weeks and then put them outside. All up there's like 6 smaller plants and 3 bigger plants of unknown type.
IMG_20211227_143712.jpgIMG_20211227_143739.jpgIMG_20211227_143804.jpgIMG_20211227_143833.jpgIMG_20211227_143856.jpg

I need to up pot, would you guys suggest a raised garden bed, a rectangular planter or pots?
 

TerryTeacosy

Well-Known Member
Popped a few Peppers four or so weeks ago. No idea what they are, or what I'm doing as they were from a random seed pack. Hoping there's some semi hots in there. Popped the seedlings in a 2x2 with a 120w quantum board for two weeks and then put them outside. All up there's like 6 smaller plants and 3 bigger plants of unknown type.
View attachment 5054474View attachment 5054475View attachment 5054476View attachment 5054477View attachment 5054478

I need to up pot, would you guys suggest a raised garden bed, a rectangular planter or pots?
You popped these only 4-ish weeks ago & they're already showing flowers?????? I wanna know what kind of secret sauce you're feeding them! You'd have to be in the Southern Hemisphere, right?

I popped some Birds-eye, Habanero Red & Naga Viper seeds a few months ago & have only just up-potted them today & they're tiny by comparison.

I know chillies are a non-photoperiod plant, but that's just astonishing!
 
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