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Tabasco Pepper Dropping Leaves

I planted some Tabasco peppers this year for the first time and they were doing great except the leaves are turning yellow and falling off. They are getting the same nutrients as my other peppers and it is only happening to the Tabasco. Any help would be great.

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I do think that too much water is a factor here, but also just the size of the plant compared to the space it lives in. That plant would have been ready to transplant into it's final container at half this size. 
 
There's a common thread I'm seeing here, and I'm not smart enough to give you the exact math, but it's a function of the total amount of space that the plant's roots have to spread out in, and the amount of nutrients available to those roots. When plants get large enough to blossom, they are going to start drawing exponentially more nutrients from the soil than they were before that point.
 
They will also need access to more water, which creates this paradox that if you overwater, it washes the very minerals that your plant needs right out of the soil.  
 
It's hard to guage what you're growing here, but I don't work with smaller than 14" pots for my transplants. Move her over, go ahead and bring the soil an extra inch or two above the base of the stem. Have all the brown part completely covered. Water the new dirt thoroughly, that will immediately start getting nourishment to the roots. 
 
Now that you're transplanted, take these additional steps as insurance:
 
1. Spray her down liberally with a full spectrum insecticide/fungicide, and also spray the surface of the rest of the dirt.
2. Cover that dirt with a wood mulch, at least 2" worth. The mulch will create a barrier between the infected roots/soil, and the plant's leaves. It will also keep bugs out, and will help with overheating. Spray the surface of the mulch too.
 
After doing all of this, test the stalk after 24 hours. If it moves very easily, get a round tomato cage, and tie some string as close as you can to the center of the stalk. For this plant to survive (And also make food for you), it has to be able to put as much energy as it can into effectively using the leaves that remain, as the roots at this stage are probably pretty stressed. Put her somewhere that gets full sun all day if possible. New leaves should start to begin sprouting within a week. Do nothing else but water around the base of the plant at least every other day, and you should see this plant begin to recover. Keep the leaves dry and you will probably not have further problems with wilting.
 
Diagram in case any of this is confusing:
18582258_10154308854081595_5892780049910824888_n.jpg

 
 
It's definitely over watering 
Getting water right in such a little cup would be hard
 
I recommend lek's method of waiting until it wilts, then topping up for 3 days in a row
 
Powelly said:
It's definitely over watering 
Getting water right in such a little cup would be hard
 
I recommend lek's method of waiting until it wilts, then topping up for 3 days in a row
If I top off won't most of the leaves be gone and it will die because it can't photosynthesis?

I'm just curious on how much to top off?I never had this before

Thanks
 
grahamsprodigy said:
I do think that too much water is a factor here, but also just the size of the plant compared to the space it lives in. That plant would have been ready to transplant into it's final container at half this size. 
 
There's a common thread I'm seeing here, and I'm not smart enough to give you the exact math, but it's a function of the total amount of space that the plant's roots have to spread out in, and the amount of nutrients available to those roots. When plants get large enough to blossom, they are going to start drawing exponentially more nutrients from the soil than they were before that point.
 
They will also need access to more water, which creates this paradox that if you overwater, it washes the very minerals that your plant needs right out of the soil.  
 
It's hard to guage what you're growing here, but I don't work with smaller than 14" pots for my transplants. Move her over, go ahead and bring the soil an extra inch or two above the base of the stem. Have all the brown part completely covered. Water the new dirt thoroughly, that will immediately start getting nourishment to the roots. 
 
Now that you're transplanted, take these additional steps as insurance:
 
1. Spray her down liberally with a full spectrum insecticide/fungicide, and also spray the surface of the rest of the dirt.
2. Cover that dirt with a wood mulch, at least 2" worth. The mulch will create a barrier between the infected roots/soil, and the plant's leaves. It will also keep bugs out, and will help with overheating. Spray the surface of the mulch too.
 
After doing all of this, test the stalk after 24 hours. If it moves very easily, get a round tomato cage, and tie some string as close as you can to the center of the stalk. For this plant to survive (And also make food for you), it has to be able to put as much energy as it can into effectively using the leaves that remain, as the roots at this stage are probably pretty stressed. Put her somewhere that gets full sun all day if possible. New leaves should start to begin sprouting within a week. Do nothing else but water around the base of the plant at least every other day, and you should see this plant begin to recover. Keep the leaves dry and you will probably not have further problems with wilting.
 
Diagram in case any of this is confusing:
18582258_10154308854081595_5892780049910824888_n.jpg

 

I transplanted it into a bigger pot and will get it in the ground this weekend. And after that see what happens, I didn't plan on growing these in pots but might do one to see. I keep the pesticides and fungicide to minimum unless I have issues. Don't like that around my plants or pets.
 
moruga welder said:
too much water ,  get that baby some lumens !
 
It's been under the LEDs since it sprouted. I think it's a combination of a little overwatering and it's lot to small. I transplanted it and will get them in the ground this weekend
 
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