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glog Harmonic_Heat's 2025 Impulsive High Altitude Scrubland Grow Attempt (near the foothills of Denver, Colorado)...what could go wrong?!

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(that's what my brain told me one fateful May day so here I am! πŸ˜Άβ€πŸŒ«οΈ)

Harmonic_Heat's 2025 Grow Log

I like to ramble; bear with me! "Quick" background on my gardening/pepper growing experience and what led to this impulsive grow attempt. I haven't grown peppers since 2009 and only the one season, but, being in south Louisiana at the time that ran late. I've grown basil and other herbs here and there since moving to the Denver area but after buying this house my neighbors made my life a living hell (and still is ten years later) I mostly gave up on using my yard for anything but growing thistle and weeds while I stay indoors to avoid them. This summer I decided to torture myself and grow a couple of pepper plants after finding some red and chocolate "habaneros" (plenty of misshapen, odd pods, not sure what they were but had some heat, esp the chocolates) at a local Asian market back in early May.

I picked out 12 plants online, marinated on my decision for the evening to make sure they were what I wanted after paring my list down to stay reasonable...and then at 1130 pm the site's prices all went half off for Memorial Day and I wound up ordering 30 (mostly pairs) πŸ‘ And then I bought 4 more at a nursery around the corner that I didn't expect to have anything but orange habs and jalapenos.


So this is the grow list (purchased online from chileplants.com unless otherwise noted):

1x Aurora
1x Black Pearl (local purchase)
1x Carolina Reaper (local purchase)
1x Centennial Rainbox
1x Scotch Bonnet (local purchase)
1x Trinidad Scorpion (local purchase)

2x Aribibi Gusano
2x Bequinho "yellow" (sent as mild substitutions for a similar pod-shaped hot variety, Chupetinho, I had chosen)
2x Candlelight Mutant
2x Dreamcatcher x Thunder Mountain
2x 7 Pot Bubblegum
2x Bahamian
2x Chocolate Brain Strain
2x Dragon's Breath
2x Fatalii
2x Mayan Habanero
2x Primofatalii
2x Sugar Rush Stripey
2x White Habanero #2
2x Wiri Wiri

Shipping went a bit sideways, or at least not according to their shipping terms, after some emails I was refunded part of my shipping cost and they said they would update their shipping terms to be more clear. I will say their customer service was/is top notch and I will likely order from them again next time I grow peppers. In short I paid for 3-day shipping but wound up getting 5 day shipping because they packed them Saturday figuring I'd get them Wednesday (UPS isn't that competent for my destination, they often add a day to original delivery dates) but they didn't show up until Thursday afternoon/near evening. I don't have a long grow season here so any setbacks can be costly if not "fatal" depending on which strain. They showed up looking fairly yellow/faded (some worse than others) and in exceptionally watered condition, 5 days like that in the dark, arrived in the condition I figured. Received June 5th.

Examples:

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Versus locally bought (solo cups)...sorry for the varying white balance, cell phone camera. The most worrisome are the Wiri Wiri, Fatalii, Primofatalii, and Dragon's Breath.
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I lucked out in a way in that the weather here was not too hot and was overcast a fair amount in the afternoons evenings for initial hardening off. Transplanting took a about a week due to other things going on and juggling time/energy. Started with the most root bound and yellow ones first. Bought buckets from Ace, not the cheapest but I prefer to support locally owned business over big box anything and a 1" hole saw.

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Promix BK (not BX, not HP), bark based medium with mychorizzae and lime

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Transplanting
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Green tarp because I figured they might not like the light colored paint under the leaves and for easier clean-up later.
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Eventually planning to move them to my yard where I've put down some cardboard and black plastic to cover the thistle and other weeds and give me an easy area to walk around. It's also the spot in my back yard that will receive the most sunlight from now until fall. Although, with the recent heat wave, kinda wondering if I should be more cautious heh. Plus the wind. 30-50+ MPH gusts aren't uncommon here. Also planning to put down some landscape matting or something so it's not too slippery (on a bit of a slope, on a hill). Not too enthused about it being black due to heat, but, I can worry about that later.
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After getting everyone transplanted I finished mucking with the flowers and herbs I bought and have just been working on getting the peppers hardened off. Slowly moving them away from the house a bit each day. There was some minor sun scalding early on but overall they've done well all things considered. Have been fertilizing them with Botanicare Grow Pro 3-2-4 and their Cal-Mag offering. New growth looks greener but because they spent 5 days in waterlogged conditions, and then I decided to water them all deeply on one particular Tuesday even though the forecast called for ~40-50% chances of rain for the next 4-5 days and strong storms (never really rains at my house, can be about to get wrecked by massive storm clouds aaaaand...nothing, maybe a sprinkle), and then Mother Nature decided to actually rain at my house every single afternoon when she normally either goes to the south or north of my house no matter how promising. So they sat in extra wet conditions for another 5-6 days until that passed. And then we went from low-mid 80's to 4 days of ~100F temps a few days after that. I mulched them with straw this past Monday to help retain moisture and watered them well on Friday on day 2 of the heat wave. I've had to move some of the straw today after realizing how good of a job it was doing to help let the medium (can't call it soil really) try and dry out a bit. I expected the hot, dry weather to dry them out much quicker.
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Today
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Using my food thermometer (instant read) to check soil temps. Will be up-potting most of what's in the clay pots to buckets and other larger containers. Their medium temps are ~95-100F+ whereas the buckets are reading about 95 on the very edge but only 85 towards the center and the big, black containers have an even higher temperature delta from exterior to interior as expected. Have also been considering reflective coatings/materials to help reduce root temps.
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I've been going out at night between midnight and 4AM and hunting for aphids and other pests. So far just a few aphids here and there, easily taken care of by hand, for now. Plenty of hover flies and wasps around, saw a green lacewing today, and a nice, large Phiddipus (jumping spider, she was very gravid...spiders are another passion of mine, used to keep and breed tarantulas and scorpions and sell to dealers, now I just keep a few, 17 or 18, down from 130 plus babies/egg sacs).

Anyway, that's enough for now I suppose. Wanted to get this log going and detail out the very basics. I have no idea if the super hots will produce much, if anything, given their current sizes and needed maturation time but I'm trying to be optimistic. I titled this "What could go wrong?" because we get such extreme temperature swings here as well as changing weather conditions (I've seen it numerous times where it's 80 one day and snowing the next, not so much in the summer, but fall and spring anything can happen), the sun here is exceptionally harsh because of the altitude (I'm around 5600' ASL I believe, just over a mile up) and "full sun" plants here sometimes aren't actually capable of handling it, plenty of pests around from Japanese beetles to aphids, and our growing season is relatively short since we often get late freezes up to Mother's Day if not a bit beyond making it hard to put stuff out even when it's nice in the spring and we might or might not get an early frost in the fall.

Thanks for reading if you're still with me! I'll post some more individual plant pics another time but you can see in some of the photos that the new growth is looking better, although, there are signs of being overwatered (bubbly/misshapen leaves). Hopefully that's behind me now though :)
 
Nice! Things are looking good. It must have been a lot of work to get those all potted up like that in a hurry. Glad to hear the hardening off is going well. From 5 days in the dark to blazing sun would be a pretty big shock without an adjustment period!
 
Nice! Things are looking good. It must have been a lot of work to get those all potted up like that in a hurry. Glad to hear the hardening off is going well. From 5 days in the dark to blazing sun would be a pretty big shock without an adjustment period!
Thanks! Yeah, I've been very sedentary for a couple of years now, first week was a bit rough lol. "Dude, you are not 25 anymore, nor 35" πŸ˜…

Man, I sure did ramble in that first post :D I should add some paragraphs and fix a few spelling errors haha

Repotted a few last night to cool the roots a bit. Root growth looking good about 2.5 weeks after receiving. I think this was a Bahamian (but which one? See further down)

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Anyway, this is a couple examples of the bubbling on the leaves I think I mentioned that I believe is from being too wet for too long (I've repotted it since, roots were getting way too hot). Only some plants are showing this sign, bigger and smaller plants if memory serves, which makes me think it's not over-fertilizing.
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The new growth being misshapen is a little concerning and hope to rectify it asap. I forget my exact watering history with nutes but I think it was the following (as a guide the label says 20 mL/gal for week 3 of veg with 18 for week 2 and 15 for week 1, all with hose water, not RO):

6-10: Light-ish watering with week 1's recommended 3-2-4 dose at ~1/4 strength so 5 mL/gal (1 tsp)

6-16(?): watered with week 2's recommended dose at half strength so ~10 mL/gallon (2 tsp) not believing it would actually rain at my house even though the forecast was rain for 4-5 days (can have the gnarliest storm clouds coming straight at me and....nothing, light skies/sunshine, maybe a quick drizzle). Except it did rain at my house. A lot. I also added the recommended dose of the cal-mag 2-0-0 as I used RO water during transplanting and figured a shot of that wouldn't hurt.

6-20: heavy watering with ~38 mL of the 3-2-4 fertilizer only (works out to 0.75 tbsp per gallon) on day 2 of a 4 day 100F/38C+ heat wave.

This is a screenshot of what I assume is the pertinent part of my local water quality report from 2024 (2025 not available yet). I have no idea if the calcium levels are normal, low,or high. PPB nor PPM aren't units I'm used to working with. Full report here but I don't think I saw Calcium mentioned anywhere else - https://www.denverwater.org/sites/default/files/water-quality-report-2025.pdf

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The white balance is a bit on the warm/yellow side for whatever reason (big reason is Google Pixel cameras suck and I like to torture myself with Pixel phones ha, still on an old 3a I bought in 2021). Sugar Rush Stripey, Dragon's Breath, and a 7 Pot Bubblegum shown which are my larger plants right now so it's not just affecting the smaller ones that are maybe 1/2-1/4 their size. Calcium deficiency?

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Habanero White 2's seem pretty happy and are growing pretty tightl. Both look very similar.
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Was happy to see this on my kitchen window (plants are about 10' away).
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And that night I found this πŸ‘ Aphids, the few I've found, like this particular plant (Biquinho "yellow") but not the other one I have of it on the other side of my "garden".
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This is the Aurora. Since it supposedly only reaches about 6"/15 cm (top of the peppers are at 7"/18 cm) I decided to just let it flower and do its thing now. I kept thinking that one leaf looked awfully large and while repotting it last night (root soil temp issue, repotting a few because of that) I finall realized it's a bit of a mutation! Pretty neat!
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This is the Biquinho "yellow" again. I think this is normal for it but if anyone thinks it isn't please speak up. Both plants have similar stuff going on.IMG_20250622_203313.jpgIMG_20250622_203322.jpg

Black Pearl looking happy as a pepper clam
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Noticed this on my Bahamian (Bradley's I guess, seller didn't specify, but going by the pics of those and Bahamian Goats it's not Goats) a couple days ago. Any ideas? Not showing on any of my other pepper plants but on my way in from verifying which plant it was just now I noticed my Anise hyssop has what appears to be the exact same issue but on more leaves. Something has also been munching on it pretty heavily so tonight I'm going hunting for that pest. Not much to see on the underside, mostly affecting the upper surface.

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Those roots on the one looks super good! I'd say a Bradley's Bahamian is more likely than a Bahamian Goat, like you say. Looks like a great selection of peppers. You're likely to have a lot of little oddities for a while as they've gone through a lot getting shipped and transplanted and all. That's edema / intumescence on the Biquinho which is NBD will go away quickly outside. The leaf deformation may simply be temporary due to issues with water transpiration during leaf formation as calcium related issues aren't too common and more common things can look like that.
 
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