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glog Dr. Scoville Glog 2025

Hi all,

To start this Glog first this years list. 15 plant i try to overwinter yet half of them are more likely dying than thriving. anyway on newyears day i will start sowing the chinense. next to come in febuary. Have a good one and may 2025 be the year all aphids kill themselfs before the try to eat your chiliplants:fireball:

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Today started hardening off my two left over 2024 plants Vulcain and Peito di Moca. Vulcain is still hanging on by a thread but some direct sunlight should help. Fingers Crossed.

Next week night temps will be round 8 degree Celsius so thing are looking up. First up after the OW will be the Rocoto's. After that its time to let all chili hell break loose:onfire:
 
Update:

the over-fertilizing symptoms have not progressed. Things are looking fine.

Most of the plants at his point are about 5 inch tall. some over 10 inch.
i've been picking buds all over the place so its really getting time to move them outside.
maybe next year start the anuums 2 weeks later.

This week is a cloudy one, so the Rocoto's are outside during the day. Tomorrow i leave then outside during the night. if all goes well i will plant them on Friday. The OW has had a few hours in the cold. Maybe leave it outside during the weekend.

This weekend start hardening off the bunch. next week will be cloudy too and a bit on the cold side. seems like a good time to prepare the plants without too many direct sunlight. I'm still in doubt on spaying clay.

all in all i think this season off to a good start, can't wait to get them all in the big pots and start to lay the drip lines.

have a good one all.
 
They look well-poised for the season, doc. I bet that mulch will go a long way toward keeping them happy as things heat up. I should do that more often. No doubt they'll power through that little bit of funkiness up top with improving weather and rooting in. It's a challenge to always have them looking perfect and still meet good timelines, especially with short seasons like ours.
 
Thnx CaneDog.

i'm trying mulch for the first time. This one is a coconut fiber brick. around here the cost about $1,50 and afther soaking they cover about 3 square feet. Downside i hear is snails like to hide in there. but we'll see. "note to self: refurbish snailgun"
 
Thnx CaneDog.

i'm trying mulch for the first time. This one is a coconut fiber brick. around here the cost about $1,50 and afther soaking they cover about 3 square feet. Downside i hear is snails like to hide in there. but we'll see. "note to self: refurbish snailgun"

Snails like mulch, although not necessarily coco coir. Google returns me hits claiming snails don't like coco coir - I have personally no experience, there are few snails here anyway. But before, I used those blue granules (metaldehyde laced with malt) if the snails caused too much plant loss.
 
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