February 28, 2014 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
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Topping pepper plants
I saw a series of videos on topping (heading) pepper plants and wondered if others practice this technique? Also bud removal of early buds? Any opinions welcome! I must admit I have never grown peppers from seeds. I have grown tomatoes and other things, but not peppers. I now have about 12 pepper seedlings. I need to experiment to see what works well here, and what works well for me, taste, in the kitchen, etc. So I have years of experimenting ahead of me! I'm growing a lot of ornamentals too, as I also want function and form.
A little of everything with a touch more ornamentals. I'm into edible landscaping. I plan to overwinter the ornamentals and the hotter peppers for possible better production the 2nd year. |
February 28, 2014 | #2 |
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If plants are started indoors with insufficient light (< 50W / sq.ft.) then their growth habit can be spindly. If pinched back when taken outdoors (or a few days prior), they will develop a more bush-like structure.
My experience with overwintering chili plants outdoors (zone 10b) is that in cooler temperatures the stems tend to stiffen and the plant struggles to restart growth the following spring-summer. In fact I have a habanero outside right now. Indoor overwintering can be very successful if temperatures are kept above 75F and daylight is simulated with 6400-6500 Kelvin bulbs at least 50W/sq.ft. -- the plants never stop producing.
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February 28, 2014 | #3 |
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Thanks for the info. I have plenty of light, not a problem there. Here's the video's
beginning few weeks later conclusion |
February 28, 2014 | #4 | |
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February 28, 2014 | #5 | |
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OK, well i didn't get that from the video. If that's why, it should have been made clear. On my lights I'm not sure about wattage? Input is 230 Watts. Output is 20,000 lumens. I also use diamond foil around plants. In the spring/summer they will get full sun. Last edited by drew51; February 28, 2014 at 01:47 AM. |
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February 28, 2014 | #6 |
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Lumens are a measure of human perception of brightness. There is no relevance to plants. They are only on the label because of an outdated US architectural law regarding light bulbs. What matters for plants is spectrum (6400-6500 Kelvin) and Watts/sq.ft. of projected area. Fluorescent bulbs have an output efficiency (initially) in the high 90 percentile, so input Watts is very close to output Watts.
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February 28, 2014 | #7 | |
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OK, well it doesn't have the wattage info. Spectrum is as you mention, the growth spectrum, not the blossom spectrum. They are plant lights, T-5's at 4 feet, 4 bulb fixture. It's bright!! I'll tell you that! I do not like looking at it. I can also add more lights, but only 2 footers. Like say a side light for mature plants. Right now the foil is useless as they are just seedlings and the light is very close to plants. I actually have a bunch of old I guess T-8 fixtures. I might use them in the future too, they are being useless at the moment. So in the winter, use the 6K Kelvin? not the 3K Kelvin lights? |
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February 28, 2014 | #8 | |
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The 3000K bulbs and this whole concept of "grow" vs. "fruit" color spectrums is a way to sell more product to stoned people growing pot. In trials where everything else (including nutrients) is nearly ideal, there is no efficacy for using 3000K bulbs and in some crops the results are poorer. No one I know in professional agriculture is using them, including the 55,000 sq.ft. indoor vegetable growing facility 3 miles down the road from here. The 3000K bulbs do have a use in manufacturing.
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Richard _<||>_ Last edited by Hermitian; February 28, 2014 at 03:08 AM. Reason: use in manufacturing |
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February 28, 2014 | #9 |
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Yes, that's what the actual specs say.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00HEYCRI8/...I2HIDH5U1G2IQI Ha!!! ROFL, OK thanks, that is very useful info, I don't have any of those bulbs, but thought about buying them. |
February 28, 2014 | #10 | |
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February 28, 2014 | #11 |
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Some other members have weighed in on this question before in parts of these threads:
http://tomatoville.com/showthread.ph...pepper+flowers http://tomatoville.com/showthread.ph...pepper+flowers http://tomatoville.com/showthread.ph...pepper+flowers Hope you find what you're looking for and have great success with your plants- kath |
February 28, 2014 | #12 |
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February 28, 2014 | #13 | ||
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February 28, 2014 | #14 |
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can you recommend a good source for t5 fixtures and bulbs that will suffice for tomatoes, bell peppers, and culinary herbs? possibly kale, lettuce, and strawberries at some point as well.
i've avoided t5's for the cost but maybe i can put back a little and move to them in the near future |
February 28, 2014 | #15 | |
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So to source T5 light systems, you can drive to a home repair store and buy 4' x 4-bulb fixtures and T5HO 6500K 55W bulbs for them at reasonable prices. If you need a lot of fixtures and bulbs, then locate a contractor's supplier -- for example, find out where a local hospital or manufacturing facility buys their lighting. Online you can order purpose-made fixtures that include the bulbs. I think the best one out there is the "Sun Blaze T5 VHO 48". On the west coast, the supplier that currently has the lowest price is Greentrees Hydroponics.
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