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overwintering First crack at over wintering

I grew chilli peppers for the first time this season. I had some successes and other plants that didn't perform so well. Anyway, I have read all of the over wintering guide, which was a fantastic resource. My trinidad scropian went in late and only made 5 pods. I was pretty happy with it so want to give it a chance to see next summer. It had a bit of leaf drop while the other chillies have exploded as we approch winter. Over night lows are occasionally getting down to 7c(44f), I reasoned perhaps the scorpion is a bit more sensitive to cold.

Anyway I have repotted and was going to bring it inside when I realized I might have the perfect location outside. I have inculded pics but it is a covered area on a huge chunk of concrete (at least 3ft thick). I am hoping the thermal inertia is enough to keep in alive over winter with the awning preventing thermal radiation. This would be perfect as I can fit all my chillies up there as I bring them out of the ground into pots. I took some measurements and it at about 3am the soil temp was about 10c (50f) where it had been planted and the scorpions pots soil was about 16c (61f) so I can keep in about 10f above the soil temp. Where I live it rarely gets to freezing with maybe 5 frosts a year. So, does this sound like a workable solution. The sun is still able to shine directly onto the plant.

I really want this plant to make it so welcome any suggestions, comments.

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when it gets really cold you might want to bring it in. you might not feel it or see it but if it frosts then it might die
 
42F in my greenhouse right now (air temp @ 4:40 AM) and a few more like it in the past week, but I have IR heat lamps on them from 9 pm to 6 am, so the actual temperature of the plants and soil never falls below 50F.
They are covered by a temporary (portable) greenhouse so a cold breeze doesn't affect them.

Coldest night was 28F and didn't bother them a bit.
Couple pieces of plywood to close a portion of what you have open, and a single IR lamp shining on all that concrete would probably do the trick.
 
That area does seems pretty perfect. As both have stated above me, get a small heat lamp up in that fixture for night times just to keep it a tad warmer and nights when you expect frosts or freezes take inside.
 
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