October 5, 2017 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: NewYork 5a
Posts: 2,303
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Feeling Pepper challenged?
I still am to some degree. I gave up a while ago but still would pick up a nursery six-pack every year and they would fail and produce just a few in September. Too cold in the evenings I think. Especially in the Catskills. Never worth the garden Realestate. So many other crops love the temps. I cracked the code a bit last Spring by starting way early. 8 varieties. Healthy seedlings but grew tall and lanky. I learned from pot growers about topping. Making a canopy. I had six AjiAmarilloSmall from Artisan. I topped one, then a week later another, then a third plant week three. The pic shows the three plants after three weeks. Into two gallon pots on the deck they all did excellent. I have had nice medium hot to hot peppers since mid June. Could be the variety but so satisfying I'm going to add the lager Aji next year. Not staking needed. My other 4 plants, other varieties just started forming peppers early Sept and still none harvested now October 5th. The last lower pic is a few days ago one of the Aji just pumping out more flowers and fruit. Those in warmer climates just seem to plant and walk away. In a challenging climate this worked for me. Worth a try for those challenged. I have enough with 2-3 dozen a week for cooking and the rest I toss in a on-going freezer zip-lock for the winter. Not enough to make a good hot sauce but maybe next year with more plants. |
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