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glog 2025 - LEAVE OR DIE

CHAPTER #01 - LIKE REPTILES


It's never too early to say "it's never too early to get started" :seeya: so this year, to counterattack a possible fake summer effect like in 2024, I started 3 months in advance (18th of december).

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Chiltepin cappuccino - 2024

I sterilized the seeds with a 9:1 water/bleach solution, and presoaked them for 24h, then I put them on paper towel on every heater of the house.

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As soon as the roots emerged, I put them in soil (instead of waiting for the cotyledons to open on the paper, that maybe was causing more stress to the roots).
My friend gave me reptiles heatmats and a reptile UV lamp, that I'm using to heat the soil filled pepper cups (my apartment is cold, now I have 5C degrees more).
🐢🐍🦎
Soil is a brand new one, no more fungus-filled recycled one thanks!!

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So, everything seems to be better and working well, apart from a big problem... I decided to go all-in and grow 130 varieties, even if I only have a small balcony. I couldn't choose what to remove, so I thought of putting 2-3-4 plants per pot. That's for two reasons: the first is that I'm insane :fireball:the second one is that, having only 4 hours of sun per day, I realized that for my environment it may be better to grow small plants: I'll expect competition among them, and hopefully many small tastings.

I started with 60 varieties: wild ones, pubescens, and a mix of chinense and frutescens; to be fair, after all this babysitting I've already got the pepper burnout. 🤯 Also, I'm already out of space! :banghead: Time to mount a twin structure.

The wild ones I chosed are:
C. lanceolatum
C. chacoense
C. rhomboideum
C. tovarii
C. galapagoense
C. eximium
C. cardenasii
C. flexuosum
Also, a couple of C. rabenii, a couple of C. annuum var. glabriusculum, a C. baccatum var. baccatum, a purple flowered baccatum and some wild chinense/frutescens.

On late january/february I'll start with C. annuum and C. baccatum ones; mutants, variegated and F1 to F4 crosses included.
Some friends are trying to overwinter at home some of my last year's cultivars that couldn't set fruits (especially F1 and C. rabenii), anyway I sowed them again.

C. lanceolatum seeds surprised me because they are black and way smaller than any Capsicum seed I've had, included C. eximium.

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I will also radically change the way I grow them outdoors, from the composition of the soil to the way I'll manage insects; but this will be told on march 🙂.
 
Well, in the end I did well to put the plants outside already, I surprisingly got an anomalous streak of days of intense sun! The plants are already growing, and after 2 days in which they moved like flags in the wind, now they are stable.

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This powerful sun has caused some burn damage on some leaves, but nothing serious, also thanks to the only half day of sun they get.
By the way, does anyone have experience of sunburn on C. pubescens and C. lanceolatum? It seems that, instead of the classic white-yellow spots like on annuum and chinense (first photo), these two species have reacted by making a sort of "silver dots" appear on the leaves (second and third photos), if that is the reason.

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I tried to make a solution of water, sulfur, potassium soap and neem oil, in order to prevent infestations of mites and aphids, but it came out a mess 🤯: the potassium soap made the pH skyrocket and I should buy citric acid to balance it; the neem oil floats, is sticky, clumps the sulfur and is difficult to wash. Having read that sulfur (effective against mites) is also useful against aphid nymphs, I decided to abandon this theoretical concoction and stick to sulfur alone. After spraying it 2 days ago on 4 pots as a probe, I applied it to the rest of the plants.

I drew a map with the varieties I have, because I'm starting to not see the labels on the pots anymore, covered by leaves or sunk during watering... there are 127 varieties, it's easy to get lost 😵‍💫

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Today I am very happy because the first flower has opened, and it is not just any flower: C. lanceolatum, a marvel! 🤩🥳

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