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2019 - The Farm

Well, it's finally time to start. Again. :)
 
Finished taking inventory of seeds today, and started the 2019 grow list. Since the 24x96' isolation high tunnel is done, I'll be growing a crazy long list this year, as we'll be growing for 2020 seed inventory. With the soil mix equipment, it should be a lot less work on my back this winter! (Even more so if I get the indoor grow areas plumbed and set up on drip irrigation, still not sure I got the budget for that yet tho)
 
Some of the seeds I'll be pulling from are damn near 10 years old now, so I expect many of these to eventually get crossed off with 0 germination. Everything I have ever saved or traded is getting planted, though. There's 203 on the list right now, many duplicates though where seeds were sourced from more than one person/vendor. 
 
The grow room at home is getting a makeover, going to be "going vertical" to get some space back. More on that in a few days...
 
This list is not complete yet, I will be adding more after I hear back from a few folks I PM'd.
 
7 Pot Chaguanas Red  (BE)
7 Pot Chaguanas Red  (PL)
7 Pot Jonah (PL)
7 Pot Long (PL)
7 Pot Original Red
7 Pot Primo Red
7-Pot Brainstrain  (LFF)
7-Pot Brainstrain Red
7-Pot Brainstrain Red (PL)
7-Pot Brainstrain Yellow (PL)
7-Pot Primo  (LFF)
7-pot Primo Red
Aji Amarillo
Aji Cereza
Aji Dulce Red
Aji Golden
Aji Golden (old)
Aji Golden  (LFF)
Aji Jobito
Aji Limo
Aji Limo  (LFF)
Aji Margaritereivo
Aji Peruvian
Aleppo (BE)
Aleppo  (LFF)
Amish Bush
Bahamian Goat
Bahamian Goat (old)
Barre Do Robiero
Bhut (Walchits)
Bhut Jolokia Brown
Bhut Jolokia Chocolate
Bhut Jolokia Indian Carbon
Bhut Jolokia Red
Bhut Jolokia Yellow
Big Sun Habanero
Big Sun Habanero  (LFF)
Big Thai Hybrid
Biker Billy (AJ Drew)
Biker Billy Jalapeno  (LFF)
Black Habanero
BOC
Bolsa De Dulce
Bonda Ma Jacques
Boyanska Kapiya
Brazilian Starfish
Brown Bhut Jolokia  (LFF)
Brown Moruga
Brown Moruga (PL)
Bulgarian Carrot
CAP 215
Carbaruga Yellow
Caribbean Red Hab
Carmia Sweet
Carolina Reaper (PL)
Carolina Reaper (BE)
Carolina Reaper  (LFF)
Carribean Red Habanero (very old)
Cayenne Long Red
CGN 19198
CGN 20812 
CGN 22091
CGN 22792
CGN 24360
Chapeu Du Frade
Chapeu Du Frade  (LFF)
Cherry Red
Chili
Chili de Abrol
Chocolate Bhutlah
Chocolate Naga Morich
Chocolate Scotch Bonnet
Criolla Sella
Criolla Sella (WHP)
Cubanelle
Datil
Dedo de Moca
Dorset Naga (BE)
Dorset Naga (PL)
Dragon Cayenne 
Dragon Cayenne (most likely crossed?)
Drying Serrano
Dulce Sol
Elephant Trunk
Espanola
Farmers Jalapeno
Farmers Jalapeno  (LFF)
Farmers Market Jalapeno
Fidalgo Roxa
Freeport Orange Scotch Bonnet
Fresno (BE)
Fresno Red
Friarello Di Napoli
Friarieilo Di Napoli
Garden Salsa
Giant Aconcagua
Giant Mexican Rocoto
Goat Pepper
Goats Weed
Habanero Antillais Caribbean
Habanero Chocolate (PL)
Habanero Cristiana
Habanero Franciscon
Habanero Giant Orange
Habanero Guadalupe 
Habanero Magnum Orange
Habanero Manzano
Habanero Niranja Picante
Habenero Red Dominica
Harbiye
Hawaiian Kona
Hot Paper Lantern
Jalapeno Biker Billy
Jigsaw
Land Race Serrano
Large Orange Thai
Large Red 7 Pot (PL)
Large Red Rocoto
Mako Akokosrade
Mako Kokoo
Matay
Matay (PL)
Mini Bell Orange
MOA Scotch Bonnet
MOA Scotch Bonnet (very old)
MOA Scotch Bonnet  (LFF)
Monster Naga
Moruga Reaper
Moruga Scorpion  (LFF)
Moruga x Reaper  (LFF)
Ms. Junie
Naga Morich
NuMex Lemon Spice Jalapeno
Numex Pinata Jalapeno
NuMex Vaquero
Orange Habanero (Wicked Mike)
Orchid PI 497974
P. Dreadie
Paper Lantern Habanero
pI 281429
Pimenta Chris Fat
Pimenta de Neyde (PL)
Pimente Espellette
Pimente Espellette (old)
Pimiento Cristal  (LFF)
Poblano (old)
Poblano BE
Poblano  (LFF)
Purple Jalapeno x Cayenne
Purple UFO
Reaper (Walchit)
Reaper Bhut
Red Fatalli  (LFF)
Safi Scotch Bonnet
Santa Fe Grande
Santa Fe Grande (PJ)
Santa Fe Grande Peppers
Scoda Brain
Scotch Bonnet x Bell Pepper 
Shattah
Star of Turkey
Stuffing Cherry
Sugar Cane
Sweet Anaheim
Sweet Anaheim (LFF)
Sweet Charleston
Sweet Charlston (LFF)
Sweet Datil (old)
Sweet French Bell
Tangerine
Tekne Dolmasi
Tekne Dolmasi (LFF)
TFM Scotch Bonnet
TFM Scotch Bonnet (LFF)
Thai
Thai (crossed?)
Thai Orange
Thai Short
Tobago Scotch Bonnet Red (PL)
Tobago Scotch Bonnet Yellow
Tobago Seasoning
Trinidad Doughlah
Trinidad Perfume
Trinidad PI 281317
Trinidad Scorpion Butch T
Trinidad Scorpion Cardi
Trinidad Scorpion Moruga
Trinidad Scorpion Original
Trinidad Scorpion Smooth
Trinidad Scorpion Yellow
Trinidad X
True Cumari
Turkish Cayenne (LFF)
Turkish Sweet Ball
Urfa Biber
White Bhut Jolokia
White Bullet Habanero
White Habanero
Xalapas Large Jalapeno
Yellow Brainstrain (LFF)
Yellow Fatalli
Yellow Moruga Scorpion
Yellow Scotch Bonnet (old)
 
 
Added 1/16, ordered from Justin
7 Pot Brain Strain Chocolate AU
7 Pot Bubblegum (BBG7) Bhut Chocolate
7 Pot Bubblegum (BBG7) x Apocalypse Scorpion (No Calyx)
7 Pot Cinder F3 
7 Pot Douglah
7 Pot Jonah
7 Pot Jonah Yellow X SB
7 Pot Lucy
7 Pot Nebru
7 Pot Primo Chocolate
7 Pot SR Strain
7JPN
Aji Pineapple
Apocalypse Scorpion Chocolate
Bahamian Beast Mustard Stinger F2
Bahamian Goat
Bhut Jolokia (Ghost) Giant Chocolate
Bhut Jolokia (Ghost) Rust
Bhut Jolokia (Ghost) Solid Gold
Black Pearl
Brazilian Brain Strain Chocolate
Brown Reaper Cross
Devil's Nagabrains Chocolate
Elysium Oxide Scotch Bonnet
Fatalii Chocolate
Genghis Kahn's Brain
Habanero El Remo
Habanero Roatan Pumpkin
Jigsaw x Moruga
Jonah's Yellow Brain
Machu Picchu
Mako Akokosrade
Monkey Face Red
Nagabrains Chocolate
Negro de Valle
Pimenta Black Bhut
Sandra's Giant Orange (Long Pheno)
SB7J Yellow
Scotch Bonnet Sweet Moruga Brown
Scotch Brains (7 Pot Pheno)
Skunk Chocolate
Tepin x Lemon Drop
UBSC x SB
Vallero
WHP 027
 
 
 
Should have the first of the chinense and pube seeds in the dirt by end of week.
 
 
Non-pepper crop

Anise Hyssop
Astro Arugula (Roquette)
Esmee Arugula (Roquette)
Arugula (Standard)
Sylvetta Arugula (Roquette)
Mizuna Asian Greens
Tatsoi Asian Greens
Red Rubin Purple Basil
Sweet Thai Asian Basil
Genovese Genovese Basil
Aroma 2 Genovese Basil
Royal Burgundy Beans
EZ Pick Beans
Tongue of Fire Beans
Prime Ark® Freedom Blackberry
Blueberry Plant Collection Blueberry
De Cicco Standard Broccoli
Belstar Standard Broccoli
Chiko Burdock
Integro Fresh Market Cabbage
Red Express Fresh Market Cabbage
Farao Fresh Market Cabbage
Deadon Fresh Market Cabbage
Bilko Chinese Cabbage
Divergent Cantaloupe (Muskmelon)
Nectar Main Crop Carrots
Negovia Carrot
Nectar Main Crop Carrots
Negovia Main Crop Carrots
Napoli Early Carrots
Yaya Early Carrots
Yaya Early Carrots
Janvel Standard Cauliflower
Mardi Standard Cauliflower
Mardi Standard Cauliflower
Janvel Standard Cauliflower
Veronica Romanesco Cauliflower
Skywalker Standard Cauliflower
Skywalker Standard Cauliflower
Common Chamomile Chamomile
Staro Standard Chives
Nira Chinese Leeks (Garlic Chives)
Cheyenne Spirit Echinacea (Coneflower)
Echinacea purpurea Echinacea (Coneflower)
Leisure Cilantro (Coriander)
Santo Cilantro (Coriander)
Natural Sweet Sweet Corn
Enchanted Sweet Corn
Nothstine Dent Dry Corn
Xtra-Tender 2171 Sweet Corn
Cressida Cress
Cool Customer Pickling Cucumbers
Poniente Seedless and Thin-skinned Cucumbers
Picolino Slicing Cucumbers
Hera Dill
Bouquet Dill
Totem Belgian Endive (Witloof)
Ruby Red Orach Specialty Greens
Light Green Orach Specialty Greens
Dark Green Orach Specialty Greens
Red Russian Kale
Toscano Kale
Westlandse Winter Kale
Toscano Kale
Red Russian Kale
Korist Fresh Eating Kohlrabi
Azur Star Kohlrabi
Kossak Storage Kohlrabi
Munstead-Type Lavender
Megaton Leeks
King Richard Leeks
Pandora Leeks
Lemon Balm
Celinet Summer Crisp Lettuce (Batavia)
Concept Summer Crisp Lettuce (Batavia)
Muir Summer Crisp Lettuce (Batavia)
Alkindus Butterhead Lettuce (Boston)
Mirlo Butterhead Lettuce (Boston)
Red Cross Butterhead Lettuce (Boston)
Sylvesta Butterhead Lettuce (Boston)
Annapolis Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Breen Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Coastal Star Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Defender Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Dragoon Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Ezbruke Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Flashy Trout Back Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Fusion Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Holon Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Jericho Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Outredgeous Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Parris Island Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Ridgeline Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Rouge d'Hiver Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Truchas Romaine Lettuce (Cos)
Bronze Herbs for Salad Mix
Cumin Herbs for Salad Mix
Bronze & Green Herbs for Salad Mix
Bergam's Green Lettuce
Blade Oakleaf Lettuce
Bolsachica Oakleaf Lettuce
Buttercrunch Heritage Lettuce
Clearwater Oakleaf Lettuce
Crispino Iceberg Lettuce
Dark Red Lollo Rossa Heritage Lettuce
Deer Tongue Heritage Lettuce
Garrison Oakleaf Lettuce
Green Saladbowl Oakleaf Lettuce
Ilema Lollo Lettuce
Newham Bibb Lettuce
New Red Fire Lettuce
Red Sails Heritage Lettuce
Red Saladbowl Oakleaf Lettuce
Tropicana Lettuce
Waldmann's Dark Green Heritage Lettuce
Encore Lettuce Mix Lettuce Mixes
Lovage
Zaatar Marjoram
Clemson Spineless Okra
Yankee Full-Size Onions
Cortland Full-Size Onions
Greek Oregano Oregano
Papalo
Pipicha
Leonardo Radicchio
Virtus Radicchio
Red Raspberry Plant Collection
Jewel Raspberry
Victoria Rhubarb Seeds
Common Sage
Common Sage Sage
Summer Savory
Green Shiso Shiso
Britton Shiso
Asia Ip Shiso
Red Shiso Shiso
Lemon Drops Spilanthes
Acadia Savoyed-Leaf Spinach
Corvair Smooth-Leaf Spinach
Saltwort
Stevia
Sparkle Strawberry Bare-Root Plants
Jewel Strawberry Bare-Root Plants
Elan Strawberry Seeds
Alexandria Strawberry Seeds
Ruby Red or Rhubarb Chard Swiss Chard
Fordhook Giant Swiss Chard
Oriole Swiss Chard
Milk Thistle
German Winter Thyme
Frederik Beefsteak Tomatoes
Jasper Cherry Tomatoes
Sakura Cherry Tomatoes
Blue Beech Heirloom Tomatoes
Mountain Magic Cocktail Tomatoes
Brandywine Heirloom Tomatoes
Cherokee Green Heirloom Tomatoes
White Cherry Cherry Tomatoes
Wisconsin 55 Slicing Tomatoes
Green Zebra Heirloom Tomatoes
Common Valerian
Farmers Wonderful Triploid Watermelons (Seedless)
Gentility Triploid Watermelons (Seedless)
Sorbet Triploid Watermelons (Seedless)
Sweet Crimson Watermelon
 

Most of the lettuce is for taste and local adaptability trials, small little plots. We'll be succession planting out most crops, small qty for market, so "big list, not so big qty."
 
Some of the stock (various herbs, seedless watermelons) is non-organic seed stock and will either be grown either in the north transitional field or in pots. 
 
570 fruit trees are also coming sometime early spring, those will go in to the dirt as soon as it can be worked after freeze. We'll plant those and forget about them for a few years.. just mow around them. All the big work starts in a few years with those.  Shouldn't need to irrigate them unless we get a big dry spell, and/or until they start producing.
 
Andy, I got 135 viable transplants out of tray 30. I could have transplanted a dozen or two more, but the roots on those weren't quite as well developed so didn't make the cut. Besides, 9x15 4" trays is all I can fit in the SUV in one shot.. so 135 it was. :)
 
Should get another 135 out of the other tray I started. 
 
Gonna be a good year for Habaneros! There's another couple of trays of habs from other folks I've got going. At this rate I'll have a whole acre of the damn things. :)
 
 
ROZf7y9.png

 
First 4 days were small batch hand-mixed soil tests.. 5th day and part of 6th day were using graveyard dirt form last year. I should get about 960 transplants out of each batch of the big mixer, got 120 out of the first 30 gal tub, and have 8 tubs mixed and ready to go.
 
Downside is I can only transport 135 at a shot out at the farm. I'm doing another 120 here (because I brought two tubs of soil home to do over the weekend).. Monday I start full time at the farm so I should be able to crank out 840 per 12 hour day. That'll empty the grow room out and I can start seeding the annuums
 
Ruid said:
Is the guy who bought the peppers you thought we're gonna go to waste on board for this year's crop too?
 
He ended up never getting back in touch with me after saying he was gonna buy everything we got. 
 
So, no, he's not.
 
Was looking in to doing fresh produce shipments this year, on top of peppers. 
 
http://www.polar-tech.com/index.htm
 
That place isn't too awful far away from me, I could pick up and save paying shipping for shipping materials :)
 
We have a dry ice factory close by, but only really need that for frozen stuff; frozen gel packs are better suited for shipping produce. I guess they're supposed to stay cold for a LONG time in an insulated box - like 6-7 days.. Kind of like shipping a mini-fridge.
 
I'm wondering if the price will work out better for shipping fresh peppers this year? Insulated package + gel packs + cheaper shipping, vs. paying premium for 2 day or 3 day shipping.
 
 
 
Walchit said:
That coir buster is seriously bad ass! I wish I lived close enough to just buy soil from you.

Nice work on the carribean reds! An acre of habs should be fun to pick, lol.
 
Yeah the coir buster is pretty handy. We busted up 2+ cubic yards of soil in no time. It took longer to get the plastic wrap off the blocks than it did to bust them up!
 
The roots on those Caribbean reds were very well developed. Lots of forking, and the roots on those seedlings were 4"+ long when shaken out of their starter cells. That's pretty impressive for being only a month old. All they've had for fertilizer is a 50% drink of fish emulsion back on 2/10. They were already on their second set of full leaves at 26 days old. 
 
I didn't have too much trouble de-tangling roots as I let the trays mostly dry out before transplanting. I tossed a LOT of viable plants - I was able to set the bar pretty high on transplants. If the roots weren't at least 3" long and branched well, or they didn't have their second set of leaves, they didn't make the cut. Even then I had 135 viable transplants out of a 72 cell starter tray. 
 
I potted 120 of them in to 4" injection mold pots (the sturdier reusable ones) and I also potted up a tray of 15 in to the sheet-molded 4" pots (cheap black thin plastic like you see plants come in at greenhouses). Those sheet trays are designed for bulk-load of soil; instead of filling each individual pot you dump soil on top of the entire tray in a carrier and level it off. Makes for very fast filling. There's conveyor belt pot filling machines you can load those through which fill soil, knock off excess, and then drill your plug holes for you; but I'm not *quite* there on volume yet to justify such a contraption. :)
 
The excess plants will be taken to a charity market in Champaign-Urbana in May, the proceeds of the charity plant sale will go towards that local food cooperative and towards instruction of youth on growing plants.
 
The calm before the storm.. all there is to do right now is transplant, and try to clear out the sprout room as quickly as possible before a flood of other plants.
 
Have room for 29 trays of annuums after factoring in the other stuff I have to start indoors.
 
TnVnukn.jpg

 
bCvvqVu.jpg

 
 
 
TrentL said:
 
 
 
Last year the big revelation was "kelp meal cooks off"
 
The soil which was 100% fatal to plants in 2018, that I'd saved in bins, is kicking ass and taking names this year. 
 
 
 
Same goal this year as last year - try to find an organic potting soil mix based on coir which does NOT require additional fertilizers for 3 months.
 
Last year so much labor time was spent giving them metered doses of fish emulsion every 2 weeks, was a real pain in the ass. Can't keep that up as I scale this out further. If I have to provide supplemental fertilizer on a per-pot basis this year it will create about 40 man hours of work each week, with the volume of stuff we are starting in the high tunnels.
Absolutely. That's the name of the game really in containers...
 
I think if you split the difference, or just shy of the difference that you'll make things just hot enough for them to set out for a month or so, while things are still indoors, by the time you're ready to plant out it would be just right. I'm certain you can get that years time wayyyy down without killing plants as soon as they go in. 
 
I do find it interesting you consider peat based mixes non organic yet you refer to coir as an organic potting mix base. 
 
I love using kelp meal and doing ferments with it for soil drenching. Creating a coir or peat based container mix that you can add enough amendments to, that will keep you from needing to individually tend to them for three months is very achievable. The smaller the container, the less time you give yourself though. The larger the container, the greater lengths of time can go by without adding nutrients. 
 
One thing I will recommend if you're serious about not having to constantly fertilize and gain back some time and energy on the scale you're at, definitely get into probiotic farming. The more humic and lactic acid/bacteria you have on hand living in the soil root zone, the less nutrients you need present in the soil. Lots of guys I know (myself included) are having amazing results with covered SIP boxes and bokashi teks to inoculate their medium which is resulting in using less than 1/3 the traditional nutrient requirements throughout the season.
 
I generally like to keep a few barrels of stuff going at all times to pull from and get a wide range of microbes for soil drenches. Mykos and all that is great, but it has never created that mycelial mat like you would see lifting back the cover on a bokashi/grokashi sip earthbox. It incredible. I don't use the sip boxes but I take all the korean natural farming practices and sort of jam them all together for my soil drenches. It has made all the difference for us. Now when I think about "fertilizing", I just kind of chuckle while remaining humble and grateful. 
 
This will video will get you thinking, visualizing (disregard crop, its all applicable) Also, that true microbial environment will be better equipped to deliver and buffer a very hot mix to your plants in a safe and effective manner. 
 
 
Scale up for larger ops and you can also experiment with other inputs
TrentL said:
 
700 bucks each (1 ton) 
 
Works out to 35 cents a pound, which is a lot less than the $1+ you'll pay getting 30 lb bags.
 
Downside is. you gotta get 2 tons to get that price break.. Lucky for me the projected requirement of it this year is 2.15 tons so I might run a little short? :)
 
Great prices. 
 
TrentL said:
 
He ended up never getting back in touch with me after saying he was gonna buy everything we got. 
 
So, no, he's not.
 
Deposits deposits deposits
 
Pepper-Guru said:
Absolutely. That's the name of the game really in containers...
 
I think if you split the difference, or just shy of the difference that you'll make things just hot enough for them to set out for a month or so, while things are still indoors, by the time you're ready to plant out it would be just right. I'm certain you can get that years time wayyyy down without killing plants as soon as they go in. 
 
I need to figure out optimal rest time with the soil. 
 
 
 
I do find it interesting you consider peat based mixes non organic yet you refer to coir as an organic potting mix base. 
 
Peat is organic, according to NOP guidelines; just not what I'd consider environmentally friendly or sustainable. When they drain the bogs they basically wipe out all animal, insect, and microbial life in those peat bogs. They try to re-introduce it afterwards but it's never the same.
 
Meanwhile coconuts, they come back year after year, and the hulls would otherwise be wasted if they weren't turned in to something else.
 
 
 
I love using kelp meal and doing ferments with it for soil drenching. Creating a coir or peat based container mix that you can add enough amendments to, that will keep you from needing to individually tend to them for three months is very achievable. The smaller the container, the less time you give yourself though. The larger the container, the greater lengths of time can go by without adding nutrients. 
 
Kelp meal will cook off in soil, large container, or small. The big bins I had of soilless mix last year (30 gal containers) hit 120F+, a week or so after mixing, and adding myco. The rate at which things are growing in the year old soil vs. the freshly mixed soil is .. well, staggering. 
 
These are fatal mixes this year;
 
13jdFSq.jpg

 
tLkDDYc.jpg

 
Roots die, plants shrivel and die. It's looking to be 100% fatal, although time will tell, I'm not pulling plants until they are crispy critters. Last year I pulled them when they looked about like this and ended up with "miracle survivor" (the one I just lopped in half and grew back out again a year later)
 
dbQ6khj.jpg

 
OLSEL9I.jpg

 
 
This is LAST year's dirt (pot I'm holding) vs. test mixes (left, which will be fatal), and the new "batch mix G" (right)
 
OfpzlNa.jpg

 
MAN I wish I had about 30 more cubic yards of last year's dirt that had rested for a year. Those things are growing like crazy!
 
 
Here's a couple pics of the iron issue.. We added a filtration system to the farm to stop this. Last year I was scratching my head over why the first group of plants I brought out turned purple from P deficiency and lagged behind everything else; this year, I finally realized why.. iron oxide had built up in the well casing over the winter. The first few 5 gal buckets I ran this year, you couldn't even see the bottom. I ran a few more until it looked like the water was running clear, and used it. 2 days later this crap started showing up (and buckets left to sit overnight had brown bottoms the next morning from iron settling out):
 
mS6U44I.jpg

 
8ppK1Bs.jpg

 
mF2tI0O.jpg

 
Last year when it happened I thought I'd overdosed them on bone meal or something, but it also happened to the hydroponic control grow, so I was scratching my head. This year, I finally figured it out. We flushed the well, ran at least 500 gallons out of it, added a 5 micron filter, and all of the plants I've taken out since have been doing just fine.
 
But those first 160 or so.. they're in for a rough time.
 
Last year these pics were taken the same day. Table 5 was the first of the plants to come out to the farm. You can see where I"ve been removing dead plants, and there is very little growth. A few plants had missed the worst of it, apparently, but by and large, this table looks horrible. They got the worst of the early-iron dose, as the well had sat idle for .. ohh, 10 years or so before I used it to water these?
 
efHMIAv.jpg

 
Meanwhile these plants were potted up and brought out two weeks AFTER the plants on that table. The seedlings are the same age; this second pic were potted up AFTER the first pic and brought out after the well had been running for a couple weeks.
 
mhppfls.jpg

 
The iron stunting thing is horrible.
 
A month after we moved plants out there I got a well test done for the organic certification, iron was still 4.6 mg/L. So elevated, but not dangerously so. 50 mg/L will stunt growth by 80% or so. I'm sure those earliest plants got a dose far bigger than that.
 
 
Also as far as remediation of the plants that are currently in growing pains over iron, plan is to continue watering with the 7.78 pH well water (filtered).
 
Iron is much less available with higher pH, while other nutrients remain more or less OK (not optimal, but still available)
 
ytfJZAr.png

 
Last year we were knocking pH down to 6.0 which certainly didn't help the iron issue, it took FOREVER for those plants to pull through.
 
So plants that are affected will continue to get 7.78 ph water straight from the well for a while, while other plants will get the more optimal 6.0-6.2 pH
 
 
 
Final count of trays 1-8
 
To the "duh" incident early on (lights on too strong, too close, turned the T5's on full blast and cooked 8 trays), the final count is 189 transplants lost vs. cells seeded (they were double seeded, so technically I lost 253 to heat). I transplanted every viable seedling, some cells on the edge had 2x good ones, very very few in the middle of the trays. Final count of transplants was 302.
 
Of those 302, 166 participated in early lethal soil tests, so that knocked me down to 136.
 
Of those, 100% are in nutrient lock from iron toxicity. My experience last year, was about 50% fatalities of plants so stricken.
 
So outlook is grim on the first 8 trays.
 
I re-seeded last year, after similar experience, and had viable transplants in may on seeds I started 2/23, so I'm going to go ahead and start additional trays. A little late, perhaps, but right now I won't have reapers, moruga/reapers, MOA scotch bonnets, or big sun habanero, if I don't restart them.
 
 
 
Trays 9 and 10, which were mainly 2012 seeds, I had 25 transplants and 7 transplants, respectively. The 25 transplants from tray 9 were 2018 seeds which were dropped in to 12 cells as a control. The 7 transplants from tray 10 were 2018 seeds which were in 6 cells, as a control.
 
Trays 11 and 12 were complete losses, all 2012 seeds, pitched at 15 days with no sprouts.
 
Tray 13, mixed stuff from WHP, has had 66 transplants. I still have 18 cells left to transplant (elisium oxide scotch bonnet, and devils nagabrains red) so that number should still go up.
 
Tray 14 has had 94 transplants from 66 cells, with 6 which are too small to transplant, remaining (devils nagabrains chocolate, sprout time was over 25 days on those).
 
Tray 23 has had 128 transplants from 48 cells, with bhut jolokia chocolate remaining. Had bad germination rates on those, only 9 transplants pending out of 24 cells seeded 4x each.
 
Still easily on track for 3200 transplants. Later I'll have to be more selective with how many I'm transplanting. I've been splitting multiples in cells, later I'll have to start culling. Right now I'm (overall) -12 transplants vs. seeded cells processed. But the trays in the pipeline are heavily loaded with 3-4 transplants per cell, and if I keep splitting them, I'll end up with 2x as many transplants as I have room for. :)
 
 
sinensis said:
can you just flush the crap out of your stunted seedlings with slightly acidic water and then add nutes?
 
No, it's tiny particles of iron, no way I'll get it out, they'll be stuck in the media. If I try, I'll waterlog the plants so badly they'll go nutrient deficient, mildew, and die.
 
Also Iron toxicity damages plant DNA and ruptures cells, so "the damage is already done", for the most part.
 
All "purple" growth will eventually fall off. Only new leaves (which may or may not grow at this point) will be healthy. Last year it set the affected plants back by about a month or more.  It takes a lot of time for new true leaves to grow out and eventually the purple tinged ones will drop off; that tissue is damaged to the point the plant can't repair it.
 
 
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