I sowed too late and I acquired a grow light for growing other plants, which are still germinating. So I figured I put two of my small chile plants under it.
On one of the plant approx. 10 flowers have already dropped. The plants both developed fruit from their first few flowers. But after I put them indoors not a single flower seems to have turned into fruit. Now I know there's a long list of things that can affect this. But I'd like to figure out which one it is.
No.1 of course is hand pollinating. I use a brush once a day. I can see pollen gush from the flower. Some of it must hit the stamen. Now there may be a small window for stamen fertility around noon that I am not hitting.
The lights are on 15 hours a day. That's not really late summer or autumn weather. Maybe I am tricking the plants into thinking it is too early in spring for fruit?
Day and night temperature also differ little. While at night my outdoor plants already had down to 6 degrees C at night.
The plants are growing quickly and keep forming new flowers. The fruits on the indoor plants even caught up and overtook the ones on the bigger outdoor plants.
Tomorrow and throughout the weekend there will be many days that have predicted a lot of hours of sun. So I will move them outside again. When I moved them inside we had the heaviest rain in 25 years.
Not sure if I am just failing in 'plant sex' because of bad technique. But I think I will just leave them outside even when there's 3 or less hours of sunlight until they have dozen of fruits. But I kind of want to solve the mystery too.
On one of the plant approx. 10 flowers have already dropped. The plants both developed fruit from their first few flowers. But after I put them indoors not a single flower seems to have turned into fruit. Now I know there's a long list of things that can affect this. But I'd like to figure out which one it is.
No.1 of course is hand pollinating. I use a brush once a day. I can see pollen gush from the flower. Some of it must hit the stamen. Now there may be a small window for stamen fertility around noon that I am not hitting.
The lights are on 15 hours a day. That's not really late summer or autumn weather. Maybe I am tricking the plants into thinking it is too early in spring for fruit?
Day and night temperature also differ little. While at night my outdoor plants already had down to 6 degrees C at night.
The plants are growing quickly and keep forming new flowers. The fruits on the indoor plants even caught up and overtook the ones on the bigger outdoor plants.
Tomorrow and throughout the weekend there will be many days that have predicted a lot of hours of sun. So I will move them outside again. When I moved them inside we had the heaviest rain in 25 years.
Not sure if I am just failing in 'plant sex' because of bad technique. But I think I will just leave them outside even when there's 3 or less hours of sunlight until they have dozen of fruits. But I kind of want to solve the mystery too.