I know with some plants you can modify the light cycle to essentially force flowering. Is there something similar you can do with peppers? My grow is indoor and some of the plants are getting a bit unwieldy.
I've been wondering about this myself... one of my Rocotos is almost five feet tall now but no sign of flowers... it may be as simple as not getting enough light, or the nutes might be off. Don't really know enough about this area to make that sort of judgment.
I've been doing some research on this myself. From what I'm reading, increasing phosphorus can stimulate blossom production.
Nope, this isn't ganja were talking about Whats your soil mix like? How intense is the lighting?I know with some plants you can modify the light cycle to essentially force flowering. Is there something similar you can do with peppers? My grow is indoor and some of the plants are getting a bit unwieldy.
Nope, this isn't ganja were talking about Whats your soil mix like? How intense is the lighting?
Are the hydro plants flowering well?
Regular potting soil with vermiculite and perlite. I can't remember the mix I used exactly - maybe 4-1-1? They're under a 400 metal halide light, running roughly 16 on, 8 off. I also have a massive fricking fatalii growing in a hydro setup.
They are not photosensitive and don't start flowering based on light cycles like that one plant does...
Are you using the same nutes for both?
Hydro is not flowering
Are you using the same nutes for both?
Were all the peppers started at the same time?Same nutes for both, yes.
For what it's worth, I have had pods off of aji habaneros, long red cayennes, and poblano
Pretty much...+1I never found a reliable way to force peppers to flower. Nothing outside of time. When they reach a certain age, they'll flower profusely but not set fruit. Give them some more time, and they fruit like nobody's business. If I severely prune older plants to sticks, they'll flower, fruit and put on vegetative growth all at the same time. They'll keep on flowering and fruiting with the shorter daylight hours in winter. The plants never let up once they mature.
U need P and K along with iron and sulfur