no way bro them be more branches meaning more peppers !Neuage said:I am still confused on which part of the plant to prune. I heard of people pruning sucker leaves. Here is a picture of my dragon cayenne. Are people pruning those little leaves forming inbetween the nodes?
spydrweb77 said:Can I top my plants immediately after transplanting, or should I give them a week or so to settle in?
I normally do a light prune after heavy waves of ripe pods if the plant doesn't have a lot of flowers. Making the plant push out of new nodes gives it the opportunity to keep blooming, it may or may not have much impact. It all depends on the length of your grow season I guess (which for me has been in Virginia)CraigJS said:What about topping or pruning after pods are/have developed ? Helpful or harmful ?
So the average first frost date here is October 15th. Would it make any sense to top now?Helvete said:I normally do a light prune after heavy waves of ripe pods if the plant doesn't have a lot of flowers. Making the plant push out of new nodes gives it the opportunity to keep blooming, it may or may not have much impact. It all depends on the length of your grow season I guess (which for me has been in Virginia)
I do very heavy prunings on overwinters after podding and they do fine
Sure, maybe not get crazy with it but a tactical pruning/topping will probably allow you to have more pods by October, sometimes the age of the plant makes a big difference too. Topping a first year plant might be detrimental but it all depends. Best thing to do is to experiment with it, prune a few and leave some others and see for yourself.Jabski said:So the average first frost date here is October 15th. Would it make any sense to top now?
Thank you
this doesn't really make sense. all leaves produce energy and nutrients for the plant and when a leaf is using more energy than its producing it will drop it. nature doesn't waste energy. also it has recently been discovered that plants grow their leaves in the most efficient patterns so all leaves get sufficient light.Jamison said:IMO large leaves do nothing besides shade light. Granted their taking in photosynthesis, but also shading what photosynthesis could happen if that makes sense. I don't think ripping length wise would be a great idea. Might just end up killing that leaf anyways. Once a leaf is "hurt" the plant will just start sucking good nutrients trying to fix that leaf which will never happen. I like to remove all big leaves, as I notice leaves trying to come out of the node.
UPDATE: I just did it, and are definitely OK 24hrs later, so glad to have chopped all those Aphids!The_Birdman said:Can you do this any time of year? I live in a climate where plants can't left outside over winter, and even when they are taken in they will wither and drop leaves around November before sprouting again in spring. I took mine in planning to do this, but we had a particularly warm/sunny winter and the leaves have not dropped naturally. Would pruning/topping be a good thing to do now at the end of January before starting to feed for flowering again the spring? The main plant I want to keep doesn't have many sprouts on the main stem so I'm worried about killing it.
Thanks to anyone who can give info!