Hi all! This is my first year growing anything. But I can get obsessed with my hobbies, so I figured that detail and observation would help me achieve some sort of success, even on my first try, despite starting late in an already short northern season.
[*]Serrano (Bonnie Plants organic)
[*]Poblano (generic label)
[*]Tabasco (Bonnie Plants)
[*]"Sweet Heat" (Savor)
[*]Flaming Flare (Gilbertie's Herbs)
All pots are plastic with drainage holes on the bottom. All have Miracle Gro Moisture Control potting soil.
The poblano and cayenne both fruited very quickly, and have also been the tallest growing. The cayenne has been very (is this the right word?) prolific, now with about 30 fully grown fruits waiting to ripen (only 4 have turned red). The poblano has only produced 6 or 7 peppers so far, 3 of which got pilfered by animals the night I left the plans in the front yard.
The serrano had already 2 fruits when I purchased it. It was slower to flower more, but when it did it grew almost 20 of them. A few turned red and I harvested. Many fell off when the pot accidentally fell (wind).
The tabasco plant has been growing and healthy, but man was this one slow to flower! Heat may have played a role in this? (I'll talk about that in later post). I did read that it could require the longest time to harvest of the group.
The Sweet Heat and Flaming Flare seemed kind of dormant for what seemed like 3+ weeks. They had yellowing leaves (more so toward the bottom than the top) what seemed to be "in between the veins" so I'd been guessing they maybe suffered some transplant shock which I exacerbated by overwatering. It took many weeks just for the leaves to begin improving. There was barely any plant growth. The Sweet Heat's 2 fruits grew a little, but the Flaming Flare's 2 fruits did not at all.
Things seem to finally going well for all 6 plants for the first time, but it's already September . The weather in New England will be getting cold soon. Luckily, Cape Cod usually has milder extremes, and less intra-day temperature variation.
- Cayenne (Bonnie Plants)
bought July 12th (~18" tall then), now in 2.5 gal pot
[*]Serrano (Bonnie Plants organic)
bought July 12th (~16" tall then), now in 1.5 gal pot
[*]Poblano (generic label)
bought July 12th (~16" tall then), now in 2.5 gal pot
[*]Tabasco (Bonnie Plants)
bought July 22nd (~20" tall then), now in 1.5 gal pot
[*]"Sweet Heat" (Savor)
bought July 22nd (~8" tall then), now in 1.0 gal pot
[*]Flaming Flare (Gilbertie's Herbs)
bought July 28th (~18" tall then), now in 1.5 gal pot.
All pots are plastic with drainage holes on the bottom. All have Miracle Gro Moisture Control potting soil.
The poblano and cayenne both fruited very quickly, and have also been the tallest growing. The cayenne has been very (is this the right word?) prolific, now with about 30 fully grown fruits waiting to ripen (only 4 have turned red). The poblano has only produced 6 or 7 peppers so far, 3 of which got pilfered by animals the night I left the plans in the front yard.
The serrano had already 2 fruits when I purchased it. It was slower to flower more, but when it did it grew almost 20 of them. A few turned red and I harvested. Many fell off when the pot accidentally fell (wind).
The tabasco plant has been growing and healthy, but man was this one slow to flower! Heat may have played a role in this? (I'll talk about that in later post). I did read that it could require the longest time to harvest of the group.
The Sweet Heat and Flaming Flare seemed kind of dormant for what seemed like 3+ weeks. They had yellowing leaves (more so toward the bottom than the top) what seemed to be "in between the veins" so I'd been guessing they maybe suffered some transplant shock which I exacerbated by overwatering. It took many weeks just for the leaves to begin improving. There was barely any plant growth. The Sweet Heat's 2 fruits grew a little, but the Flaming Flare's 2 fruits did not at all.
Things seem to finally going well for all 6 plants for the first time, but it's already September . The weather in New England will be getting cold soon. Luckily, Cape Cod usually has milder extremes, and less intra-day temperature variation.