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Stickman's 2018 Soil Mineralization Glog

Hi all! Now that the new year is here, it's time to swing into gear and get ready for the next season of growing chiles! I'll be starting my seeds in a few weeks, and after rotating the crops in my raised beds to get rid of the Pepper Maggots that showed up in 2016, I'll be able to plant a lot more this year. In the meantime, I thought I'd share what I do to prepare my garden soil for the start of the season. I've grown chiles in pots and in-ground, and for me at least, I seem to do better with the plants grown in the soil.
 
To start with, my garden soil is sandy, so I have to add lots of compost in the top six inches of soil to hold moisture and prevent nutrients from leaching away. Soil microbes break it down in just a few years though, so keeping it topped up is a yearly necessity. We compost our kitchen waste to that end, but there's never enough, so we also buy it from a local outfit that produces it commercially. I was put onto adding biochar as well by brother Scott (Devv.)  The biochar does the same things that humus does but it lasts longer and  helps the environment by sequestering carbon in the soil. I've also been reading about how amending with Montmorillonite clay can increase fertility and help with soil structure, but more on that in a future post.
 
At the end of each growing season I take soil samples from my various gardens and get them tested at Logan Labs in Ohio. They do a more thorough job than our UMass extension by testing for Cobalt, Molybdenum and Silicate levels as well as he usual suspects. :)    I'm taking a "Build and Maintain" approach toward soil nutrients because I want my plants to have the best organic nutrition available to them, and at the small scale I'm planting, it's affordable for me. http://nevegetable.org/cultural-practices/plant-nutrients  
 
Here's my last soil test, taken the end of November. It's the starting point for figuring what amendments I'll need when I prep my beds for planting in the spring. The pepper garden is bordered in yellow.
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In my next post I'll cover the math I use to figure that out. Cheers!
 
Those Aleppos are looking good! Can't wait to try those myself. Have you grown Rezhas before? I have one pod that's already corking, I love the look of them. No idea what they taste like though. I'm a little jealous of your Rocoto flower. Mine are growing great but no flower in sight...
 
stickman said:
 
Cheers Ben! I hope all is well with you?
 
The Annuums are in full production mode now, as shown by all those dropped skirts on the plastic mulch...
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The plants have greened up and really begun to grow too.
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The Aleppo peppers are the biggest pods at the moment...
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... and the Pequins are the most prolific.
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Rezha, Jalapenos and Kapia Ajvarski peppers are just starting to bloom. Here are the Ajvarskis.
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Kurtovska Kapias
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Paprikas
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Poblanos
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Goat's Weed
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In the pepper bed behind the house, the MoA Bonnets, CARDI Yellow Scorpion and Red Rocoto have joined the Yellow Brains and Douglah in blossoming, and the PDN x Bonda crosses will be next. Here's a Rocoto blossom.
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Hope you all have a happy and productive weekend all. Cheers!
 

Good stuff Rick!
 
Those plants are ready to rock ;)
 
 
b3rnd said:
Those Aleppos are looking good! Can't wait to try those myself. Have you grown Rezhas before? I have one pod that's already corking, I love the look of them. No idea what they taste like though. I'm a little jealous of your Rocoto flower. Mine are growing great but no flower in sight...
 
Cheers b3rnd! I haven't sampled any of the Aleppos yet, but I have 4 ripe ones I picked today. I'm thinking I'll be drying them all in my solar dehydrator along with the Szegedi Paprikas and Pequins. I've tried to grow the Rezhas before, but had germination troubles... so far, the seeds I got from Baker Creek seed company have germinated the best of any I've tried. Here's what they looked like this morning.
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Devv said:
 
Good stuff Rick!
 
Those plants are ready to rock ;)
 
 
Thanks brother! Are you back from L.I. yet? Hope you had a good time with family. Plants are starting to really rock! We just got back from nine days in Canada visiting my wife's relatives, and everything exploded after the steady rains we got here while we were gone. I'm picking pole-type French Filet beans, sweet onions and Thai eggplants. I pulled the garlic just before we left and hung it up to dry. The green chiles are all ready to begin picking, and I'm starting to get ripe Goat's Weed in addition to the Aleppo and Pequins. I think I'm finally beginning to catch up to you in Tejas. :)
 
Trident chilli said:
Coming along nicely Rick great to see your plants podded up .... our hottest day of the year here today 29.4c but may get hotter later in the week
 
Oh man, it was hot and muggy in northern New Brunswick, Canada last week and the first part of this week. Temperatures were around 30 - 32 degrees Celsius and very humid. The locals were all complaining about the heat because it's 5 degrees warmer than they're used to. Down here it got to 35 -37 and the chiles lapped it up!  Here's a pic of a traffic stop sign in Mi'kmaq on the "First Nation" (reservation) next to the place where we were staying.
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karoo said:
Dropped skirts, what more do you need.
Rocotto flowers, that's what I'm looking forward to the most, I guess.

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Cheers Jacques! The ladies stopped dropping their skirts for a while there when it stopped raining and dried out, but they're back at it again now that it's been raining lately.
 
...And now for something completely different...
 
Sorry I haven't been around much lately folks... getting ready for this latest trip proved a logistical nightmare, and when we were away we weren't able to go online. I've gotta say that when we got back I was really gratified by how much everything grew while we were away.  Pepper row behind the house has become a hedge...
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...and the chiles in it have grown quite a bit.
 
Bhut
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Douglah
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Red Rocoto
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Manzano
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The growdown plant is finally starting to show some color! In another week or so I should begin adding to the leaderboard.
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The PDN x Bonda plants are podding up like crazy now too. I see I have both the purple and white phenos going, so it looks like I got the results I wanted.
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Here are some more pics taken in the veggie garden where I have my Annuum varieties planted...
 
Aleppo peppers are producing well and beginning to ripen. I picked 4 pods today. Also some Jals and Tepin crosses picked green.
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Jalapenos are all looking like this
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A typical Goat's Weed
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Pequins are loaded and beginning to ripen!
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There's one Bell pepper - Poblano cross that snuck into my starts this year. I cut one open today to confirm my suspicions. It's thinner-fleshed than a Bell pepper though it has the same habit, smells like a chile and has mild heat in the membranes. This one should be good for stuffing!
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I only planted one Frutascens this year... a Malagueta seedling a friend started to give me. It's the only pepper plant I have that isn't blossoming yet, but it should start soon.
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For sweet peppers, I have two kinds of Kapia pepper. One is Kurtovska Kapia, which I'll wait to fully ripen before picking sometime in September...
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...And Kapia Ajvarski from Baker Creek. They're smaller than the Kurtovskas and I'll be picking them green to cook with.
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One last Nightshade... today's harvest of Thai Eggplants.
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Cheers all!
 
 
Walchit said:
That soil seems to be working
karoo said:
All good looking plants and peppers , must be the soil working out for you.
Thanks guys! It's been tough growing conditions here until recently, and re-mineralizing the soil is a major reason I've done as well as I have. It shows up in the flavor of the produce as well. I made a stir-fry last night with some of the sweet onions from the garden, and they'd rival Maui onions grown in that volcanic soil for sweetness.

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Fantastic, Rick! Pods everywhere!!! Nice Aleppo's! I'm gonna try those out next season, but this year I have a Haskorea.
Haskorea
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I'll bet mealtime at your house is the place to be! Very nice stuffing peppers. I'm interested in the Malagueta. It looks kinda like the Peri-Peri. Good pepper if it had less seeds. Lol. Growdown plant is killing it! And I might grow a Douglah again next year. I'm a huge fan of the Brown Moruga PL, though. That cross would be a scorcher. Lol. Great stuff! Keep it up!
 
Bhuter said:
Fantastic, Rick! Pods everywhere!!! Nice Aleppo's! I'm gonna try those out next season, but this year I have a Haskorea.
Haskorea
 
<snip>

I'll bet mealtime at your house is the place to be! Very nice stuffing peppers. I'm interested in the Malagueta. It looks kinda like the Peri-Peri. Good pepper if it had less seeds. Lol. Growdown plant is killing it! And I might grow a Douglah again next year. I'm a huge fan of the Brown Moruga PL, though. That cross would be a scorcher. Lol. Great stuff! Keep it up!
 

Very cool-looking pods Adam... they look like Gochus to me, or maybe Gochu crosses as the name suggests. How do you use them?
Thanks for the good vibe, I'm hoping we're past the hump this growing season and will be able to coast a bit until harvest. This is the first time I've grown a Malagueta, so I don't know exactly what to expect, but I've grown PeriPeri, Tabasco, Lotah Bih and Guam Boonies... all Frutascens chiles, and they have a similar flavor and heat profile. I expect I'll use them for Louisiana-style hot sauce since my current stash is getting a little low. I love the "Dougies" but they are not a sweet and/or fruity pepper. I smoke them with cherry wood to improve the aroma and flavor, and use them in powder blends and tomato-based hot sauces to kick the heat up a few notches.     Cheers!
 
stickman said:
 
Very cool-looking pods Adam... they look like Gochus to me, or maybe Gochu crosses as the name suggests. How do you use them?
Thanks for the good vibe, I'm hoping we're past the hump this growing season and will be able to coast a bit until harvest. This is the first time I've grown a Malagueta, so I don't know exactly what to expect, but I've grown PeriPeri, Tabasco, Lotah Bih and Guam Boonies... all Frutascens chiles, and they have a similar flavor and heat profile. I expect I'll use them for Louisiana-style hot sauce since my current stash is getting a little low. I love the "Dougies" but they are not a sweet and/or fruity pepper. I smoke them with cherry wood to improve the aroma and flavor, and use them in powder blends and tomato-based hot sauces to kick the heat up a few notches.     Cheers!
I'm not quite sure on the usage of Haskorea peppers...and neither do the seed savers. Lol. They say "We are only beginning to explore its culinary potential." I imagine you'd flake them, much like the Aleppo. As far as pod shape and flavor profile:

Haskorea is smaller and less blocky than 'Aleppo' (which is usually turned into a chili powder), but with a richer, spicier flavor.

I'll bet Douglahs are fantastic smoked. I've only tried fresh. But mixed with a bonnet or something after smoking WOULD improve that acrid flavor. A great chef mind in Mass.! Lol. Here's to great weather!!! :cheers:
 
Bhuter said:
I'm not quite sure on the usage of Haskorea peppers...and neither do the seed savers. Lol. They say "We are only beginning to explore its culinary potential." I imagine you'd flake them, much like the Aleppo. As far as pod shape and flavor profile:

Haskorea is smaller and less blocky than 'Aleppo' (which is usually turned into a chili powder), but with a richer, spicier flavor.

I'll bet Douglahs are fantastic smoked. I've only tried fresh. But mixed with a bonnet or something after smoking WOULD improve that acrid flavor. A great chef mind in Mass.! Lol. Here's to great weather!!! :cheers:
Sounds like they share at least some Korean heritage... I find the Gochus are best when sun-dried at the lowest practical temperature. That gives them a complex flavor that's earthy and sweet... similar to good Hungarian Paprika but spicier. The heat profile is about Cayenne-hot. I say the lowest practical temperature because I've tried hanging ristras up in the sun to dry, and always end up losing half to a third of the pods to mold. They do much better at 98 - 115 degrees in my passive solar dehydrator.

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Devv said:
Looks like things are kicking into high gear there Rick!
 
Very nice to see all went as planned and you'll be restocked until next season.
 
Keep it green buddy!
 
Cheers Scott! We're definitely ramping up now...
 
Douglah
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MoA Bonnets
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Yellow CARDI Scorpions
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PDN x Bonda crosses are definitely white and purple phenos.
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I've got green chiles coming out my a** right now... Jals and Tepin crosses are just loaded! The rest are coming in slowly for now, but the pace will pick up fairly soon... especially the Yellow Brain. That plant's a beast!
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Today's harvest
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Have a great weekend all!
 

 
 
I gotta build a solar dehydrator. Yours looks good. Did you use plans someone made or developed that yourself?

I was looking at some the other day that pulled the hot air down thru the food then back up a chimney or something. It's supposed to be better I can't remember why. Your heat just comes up through the bottom of your racks right?
 
Walchit said:
I gotta build a solar dehydrator. Yours looks good. Did you use plans someone made or developed that yourself?

I was looking at some the other day that pulled the hot air down thru the food then back up a chimney or something. It's supposed to be better I can't remember why. Your heat just comes up through the bottom of your racks right?
 

Yup... it's totally passive solar because it uses natural convection to pull the air through the system. Heat rises, eh? ;)
 
I got the plans from the Mother Earth News website. They were very thorough, as they had a complete parts list and a table to figure the angle needed on the solar collector based on your latitude.   Each tray has about 2 square feet of drying space for a total of 22 square feet. That's plenty for most folks.
 
https://www.motherearthnews.com/diy/tools/solar-food-dehydrator-plans-zm0z14jjzmar
 
Some great looking pods and plants.
That dehydrator looks fantastic.
One more thing to do. The "must do" DIY list is growing.

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