I scaled back - from 48 plants to 40. Consider that I am the only one in my house who really eats them - that's a lot of plants for one person. I tried to cut back more, really I did, but you know, those jalapeno plants at Lowes were just calling my name. And the….. you get the idea.Â
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On a more serious note, you may have been over-attending them. Plants do require our attention, no doubt about it, but I seem to recall seeing you post quite a bit about fertilizers, amendments or such. Consider this - I live next door to a retired couple. They have raised beds in their back yard (no fence between us), plants in pots and plants in the ground in their front yard. They are out there, tending their garden, for hours every day. And yet, every year they express jealousy over my container garden as well as my front bed. Here we are, mid-September, and their raised beds are about done - what's left at this point is rather scraggly. My plants look like it's mid-summer, all bushy and green. How much attention do my plants get? I work full-time, until a year ago was also taking college classes, and I work out and such. I make sure the plants have sufficient water and are periodically fertilized, but I'm not out there every day. Heck, it may be a week, at times, between trips to check out my plants. The one exception is when we have excessive rain, at which I haul them into the garage (and then back out when the rain stops.) But, overall I spend way less time on my plants than my neighbors do - I tell anyone who will listen that God takes better care of my plants than I do.Â
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All this to say "don't give up." Over-attention can be corrected - if that's the root cause of your plants' low productivity, they will do better when you relax more about them.