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Growing Chiles in HEL - 2019

Today I took 27 pellets off the heat mats and transplanted them into their first small pots. Then I moved them into my temporary grow room (sauna) under the lights where they will spend the next 60 days or so until it's warm enough to move outside for the summer.
 
I've still got another 75 pellets on the heat mats and will move them to the lamps as they pop.
 
On the tray in the photo, there are two separate LED lamp rigs.
 
The lamp specs: 
 
Strip Length: 61 cm
Watts: 15 watts per strip (45 watts per rig)
Kelvin: 6400K
Lumens: 1500 per strip
PPFD (at 100mm distance): 399 µmol/s/m2 per strip
 
tarha.jpg
 
That's super bad, Mika! Can't wait to see the whole
view of the deck when it is totally finished!
 
 
 
PaulG said:
That's super bad, Mika! Can't wait to see the whole
view of the deck when it is totally finished!
 
 
 
I thought I replied to this last night but it is disappeared. Hope I'm not losing my mind!
 
Not sure if it will ever be totally finished, I just do more improvements from this point forward. I have a lot of leftover wood that I was gonna use to build some storage boxes etc but the weather has been raining at least some point of nearly every day since the deck itself was completed. Not too keen on bring out my big saw when it's raining.
 
Hard to capture in a single photo when it's size is 7.5m (24.6f) wide and 6m (19.6f) back to front. Probably could do a panorama photo with the iPhone.
 
Due to cool weather and frequent rainfall this summer + combined with 20% vermiculite in my mix I doubt that I will even bother with the drip irrigation system. Everything seems to be growing just fine with a once per week heavy feeding that they have been getting this year. 
 
PaulG said:
Sounds like you are having the same great weather we are, Mika!
 
Yep, Paul. Last summer we had the hottest in recorded history and now this summer is the coolest I have ever seen in Helsinki. What happened to the global warming?  :confused:
 
podz said:
 
Yep, Paul. Last summer we had the hottest in recorded history and now this summer is the coolest I have ever seen in Helsinki. What happened to the global warming?  :confused:
Global climate chaos is more like it, unfortunately.
Too bad the phrase 'global warming' became the
poster child for climate change.
 
PaulG said:
Global climate chaos is more like it, unfortunately.
Too bad the phrase 'global warming' became the
poster child for climate change.
 
Yeah and when you live near the coast it's always unstable anyway.
 
I noticed brown spots on about 8 of my plants today and am suspecting that they will be dead within a week or two. Hopefully it won't jump over to the pubes. There has been almost no sun, no warmth and only rain for a few weeks straight now - daytime highs are in the 50s and not predicted to get better for the next month. I'm guessing the pubes will be the survivors this year.
 
podz said:
 
Yeah and when you live near the coast it's always unstable anyway.
 
I noticed brown spots on about 8 of my plants today and am suspecting that they will be dead within a week or two. Hopefully it won't jump over to the pubes. There has been almost no sun, no warmth and only rain for a few weeks straight now - daytime highs are in the 50s and not predicted to get better for the next month. I'm guessing the pubes will be the survivors this year.
 
:/ I hope those spots don't spread, and that at least the pubes will live and thrive! ..My lone annuum on the balcony (4,5hrs of potential direct sun) doesn't appear as if it is going to produce much,('Eithiopian brown' at 20C high days and 8C mornings) I'm happy indoor parameters are mostly controllable even if space ain't.
 
podz said:
I noticed brown spots on about 8 of my plants today and am suspecting that they will be dead within a week or two.
 
 
Possible Bacterial Leaf spot?  
 
Can you pick off the affected leaves without denuding the plant?
 
PaulG said:
 
Possible Bacterial Leaf spot?  
 
Can you pick off the affected leaves without denuding the plant?
 
 
Yep. I don't think picking off the leaves helps as it is a systemic disease.
 
It helps to slow down the spreading since it also spreads
by contact. The disease lives in the soil so it's important
to keep the dropping leaves picked up. Seeds from affected
plants have the bacterium on their surface, so when they
germinate, the plant is automatically infected. 
 
I had to let a few big containers go dormant for over a year
to allow the bacteria to die off. I now pick a leaf off at the first
suspicion of BLS, looking for the dark depressions that
show up first. I try to keep the soil surfaces scrupulously
clean of plant debris.
 
BLS is a real b***h, alright. Good luck dealing with it. According
to what I have read, there isn't really a fool proof way to get rid
of it. Especially since the bacteria can infect the plant by entering
the pores in the leaves.
 
Brothers, sorry for being negligent to the blog. I have been working with my big makita many hours per day trying to get the deck into shape for winter. Some chili photos are coming soon.
 
Pubes...
 
I have two Montufars, both of which are flowering and fruiting heavily for several weeks already. Same with my Pico Mucho.
 
And then there are the Manzano Rojos - I have 6 of them in huge pots and they have all grown up into large, sturdy, leafy plants with tons of flower buds. Not a single pod on any of them so far, a few plants have been flowering for several weeks already but they all drop off. Daytime temps are in the 25c (77f) range now dropping down to 17c (62f) or so at night. Last night, I decided to try a new strategy: before going to bed, I took the water hose and showered them down with cold water to try to trick them :-) Let's see how it goes.
 
Pico Mucho - the plant I thought was going to die after being getting a sunburn, attacked by insects and finally attacked by a squirrel. This plant is now sprawled out sideways and full of little pods and flowers. It's hard to fit the entire plant into one photo! I was supposed to pot it up already from it's 3GAL pot to something larger but haven't found the time yet.
 
IMG_1482.jpeg
 
OK I had to get some photos of the Rojos since it's such a nice day.
 
 
Here are 4 of the 6 Rojo pepper plants. They are already larger than the standard-sized tomato cages.
 
IMG_1486.jpeg

 
 
Here are the other 2 Rojos.
 
IMG_1488.jpeg

 
 
It seems that spraying cold water on them before bedtime last night worked - there are now multiple pods set on 2 of the 6 plants.
 
IMG_1489.jpeg

 
 
Rojos are taller than me! (They are sitting on a bench)
 
IMG_1492.jpeg

 
 
Rojo in the sun
 
IMG_1494.jpeg

 
 
One of my Montufars being happy
 
IMG_1496.jpeg

 
 
And the Montufar has got a lot of pods on it already
 
IMG_1497.jpeg
 
PaulG said:
It helps to slow down the spreading since it also spreads
by contact. The disease lives in the soil so it's important
to keep the dropping leaves picked up. Seeds from affected
plants have the bacterium on their surface, so when they
germinate, the plant is automatically infected. 
 
I had to let a few big containers go dormant for over a year
to allow the bacteria to die off. I now pick a leaf off at the first
suspicion of BLS, looking for the dark depressions that
show up first. I try to keep the soil surfaces scrupulously
clean of plant debris.
 
BLS is a real b***h, alright. Good luck dealing with it. According
to what I have read, there isn't really a fool proof way to get rid
of it. Especially since the bacteria can infect the plant by entering
the pores in the leaves.
 
I had to completely trash 2 Padrons and seriously cut back my Reaper and Chocolate Scotch Bonnets. Also had to pull a ton of leaves off of most of the other plants, with the exception of the pubes which don't seem very affected by it (there were a few leaves).
 
I noticed this stuff after a heavy downfall of birch seeds combined with rain. The birch seeds got stuck to the leaves of my chiles and then the problems really started happening fast. Do you think that it's conceivable that this stuff could have actually been carried / spread by seeds from a birch tree?
 
I think that is entirely possible since the
bacteria are common in the environment.

Bad luck, if that is, indeed, the case. Talk
about sabotage.
 
PaulG said:
I think that is entirely possible since the
bacteria are common in the environment.

Bad luck, if that is, indeed, the case. Talk
about sabotage.
 
 
Yeah we had exceptionally shitty weather during mid-June til mid-July - cool and wet with a lot of stormy winds. The winds produced a constant downfall of crap from all the tall surrounding trees, including those birch seeds. In addition, we had swarms of butterfly moths and they nearly wiped out my Rojos (recovered now except for one which might not even produce flowers).
 
I'm not sure if the seeds is what caused it but after they got stuck to leaves with rainwater, when they dried it left "burn spots" on the leaves which then just seemed to spread like hell. Last summer was my first year growing at this new house and we had a severe drought so no such similar problems.
 
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