Hello again after a few years away!
I haven't grown peppers since late 2015 but made a decision a few weeks ago to dip my toe in to the pepper trade once again. Between now and then I lost the use of my garden due to an overzealous exterminator deciding to dump the remainder (20 gallons) of his termiticide on my garden soil, rendering it unsafe for growing anything for human consumption for the next 10 years. I was really gutted at the loss because I had been building up the soil for YEARS with infusions of mushroom compost, teas, powdered eggshell and other amendments to make the space produce like Florida sand just never can. Because of this I decided to take a break from the hobby. Well, 2018 is here and I'm getting a late start, but a start nonetheless.
I'm going to try and grow only those seeds that I already had in my collection, which is pretty substantial:
This random pile represents about 1/2 of what I've collected, traded or purchased back when I was previously growing. For this year, I told myself I'd plant a maximum of 50 seed starters and then only keep a maximum of 25 if they sprouted; giving the others away to friends, family, etc.
Since I can't plant in the ground this year it's going to be fabric pots all around. The reason for this is two-fold: one, due to the previously mentioned loss of garden plot, and two since I'm getting such a late start on the year, even with the extended Florida growing season, I can move the plants inside to overwinter and have a head start on next year.
I've got 20 7-gallon fabric pots and then another 5 10-gallon fabric pots. For soil I'll be getting bagged soil from the garden center, adding in bulk vermiculite, perlite, Black Kow, and some other micronutrients as needed.
For each entry I planted 3-4 seeds in a cell, and I'll cull any extras that might start. This is what I've got in the starter tray:
*C. annuum
Albanian Red Hot
Aleppo
Cherry Bomb
Cowhown
Çumra Cherry
Ethiopian Brown Berbere
Farmer's Jalapeño
Giant Jalapeño
Large Thick Cayenne
Matay
Negro Chilhuacle
Pasilla de Oaxaca
Sweet Cayenne
Turkish Sweet Bell
*C. baccatum
Aji Oro
Bishop's Crown
Brazilian Starfish
*C.chinense
Aji Jobito
Aji Llaneron
Aji Margariteño
Aji Pepon
Aji Rosita Rojo
Aji Rosita
Carolina Reaper HP22b
CGN 21500
Chocolate Bhut Jolokia
Dulce Marrón
Peach Bhut Jolokia
Red Bhut Jolokia
Shabu Shabu Jolokia
Trinidad Scorpion Moruga
Yellow Brain Strain
*C. frutescens/chinense
Aribibi Gusanito Orange
*C. pubescens
Giant Mexican Rocoto
Orange Rocoto
Pineapple Rocoto
Which of the above should get the 10-gallon treatment? (assuming they sprout and survive that long) What do you think my chances are of getting 3+ year old seeds to start? They have been kept in ziplock bags, inside of a storage box in an air conditioned space for the entire dormant period.
Thanks in advance for any comments or suggestions!
I haven't grown peppers since late 2015 but made a decision a few weeks ago to dip my toe in to the pepper trade once again. Between now and then I lost the use of my garden due to an overzealous exterminator deciding to dump the remainder (20 gallons) of his termiticide on my garden soil, rendering it unsafe for growing anything for human consumption for the next 10 years. I was really gutted at the loss because I had been building up the soil for YEARS with infusions of mushroom compost, teas, powdered eggshell and other amendments to make the space produce like Florida sand just never can. Because of this I decided to take a break from the hobby. Well, 2018 is here and I'm getting a late start, but a start nonetheless.
I'm going to try and grow only those seeds that I already had in my collection, which is pretty substantial:
This random pile represents about 1/2 of what I've collected, traded or purchased back when I was previously growing. For this year, I told myself I'd plant a maximum of 50 seed starters and then only keep a maximum of 25 if they sprouted; giving the others away to friends, family, etc.
Since I can't plant in the ground this year it's going to be fabric pots all around. The reason for this is two-fold: one, due to the previously mentioned loss of garden plot, and two since I'm getting such a late start on the year, even with the extended Florida growing season, I can move the plants inside to overwinter and have a head start on next year.
I've got 20 7-gallon fabric pots and then another 5 10-gallon fabric pots. For soil I'll be getting bagged soil from the garden center, adding in bulk vermiculite, perlite, Black Kow, and some other micronutrients as needed.
For each entry I planted 3-4 seeds in a cell, and I'll cull any extras that might start. This is what I've got in the starter tray:
*C. annuum
Albanian Red Hot
Aleppo
Cherry Bomb
Cowhown
Çumra Cherry
Ethiopian Brown Berbere
Farmer's Jalapeño
Giant Jalapeño
Large Thick Cayenne
Matay
Negro Chilhuacle
Pasilla de Oaxaca
Sweet Cayenne
Turkish Sweet Bell
*C. baccatum
Aji Oro
Bishop's Crown
Brazilian Starfish
*C.chinense
Aji Jobito
Aji Llaneron
Aji Margariteño
Aji Pepon
Aji Rosita Rojo
Aji Rosita
Carolina Reaper HP22b
CGN 21500
Chocolate Bhut Jolokia
Dulce Marrón
Peach Bhut Jolokia
Red Bhut Jolokia
Shabu Shabu Jolokia
Trinidad Scorpion Moruga
Yellow Brain Strain
*C. frutescens/chinense
Aribibi Gusanito Orange
*C. pubescens
Giant Mexican Rocoto
Orange Rocoto
Pineapple Rocoto
Which of the above should get the 10-gallon treatment? (assuming they sprout and survive that long) What do you think my chances are of getting 3+ year old seeds to start? They have been kept in ziplock bags, inside of a storage box in an air conditioned space for the entire dormant period.
Thanks in advance for any comments or suggestions!