Hello everyone,
This is my second year gardening. I grow hot peppers and tomatoes. I grow my tomatoes from seed, I failed at my pepper seedlings last year. I have a cat that loves eating plants and I could not make a proper set up without her destroying my peppers. Tomatoes work because they grow faster as seeds and seem less fussy. So given that I cannot take the time to grow the pepper seeds, I buy plants. I order from chile plants.com.
I tried to grow the following: 2 bhut jolokia (bought from local green house), 4 scotch bonnet (bought from local green house), 1 thai ornamental, 2 filius blue, 2 moruga scorpions, 2 red savina habanero, 2 mustard habanero, 2 chololate habanero and 1 yellow devils tongue last year. I had mixed results. My locally bought plants the 2 ghost peppers and 4 bonnets all grew great.
I had more mixed results from my online bought plants. However, I think I made mistakes as a begginer. I was told not to move plants once you put them in the ground. I moved some of them like 2 or 3 times. Also I may have over watered, my soil dries out in the heat in almost no time and when I saw my plants wilting from the hot sun I watered daily so they did not wilt. I know now after reading that it is best to let the pepper plant wilt and then water. I had bad problems with slugs eating plants up half of the summer too.
Anyway, here is why I ask for tips. The following never produced: 2 moroga scorpions, 2 red savina habaneros, 2 mustard habaneros, 1 chocolate habanero.
I had good results from my 2 filius blue, and my 1 thai plant. I also got 1 chocolate habanero and my 1 yellow devils tongue to produce by extending their grow by bringing them in before winter.
I am going to use a black plastic sheet to keep out weeds and I hear it helps maximize heat. Is there anything else I should know? I know now to not move a plant after I put it in a spot. All of my plants that never produced had tons of flowers but no fruit. I have been reading up on self polinating if you do not have the needed insects around.
I try to grow organic and I use Jobe's organic Tomato fertilizer: http://www.easygardener.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=category.display&category_ID=223
I know the fertilizer helped with my tomatoes. I had a monster cherry tomato plant over five feet in all directions. It was beautiful!
Sorry if this is long. I am ordering plants again soon and I just want to get a better result this time around. I live in Michigan, so my growing season is shorter than in other places. I was very bummed when I did not get any morugas, or barely any habaneros last year. I love habaneros, and I want to try the mustard and red savina. I am trying to grow thai, habaneros, morugas, and carolina reapers. Thanks for any advice you can give!
Dustin
This is my second year gardening. I grow hot peppers and tomatoes. I grow my tomatoes from seed, I failed at my pepper seedlings last year. I have a cat that loves eating plants and I could not make a proper set up without her destroying my peppers. Tomatoes work because they grow faster as seeds and seem less fussy. So given that I cannot take the time to grow the pepper seeds, I buy plants. I order from chile plants.com.
I tried to grow the following: 2 bhut jolokia (bought from local green house), 4 scotch bonnet (bought from local green house), 1 thai ornamental, 2 filius blue, 2 moruga scorpions, 2 red savina habanero, 2 mustard habanero, 2 chololate habanero and 1 yellow devils tongue last year. I had mixed results. My locally bought plants the 2 ghost peppers and 4 bonnets all grew great.
I had more mixed results from my online bought plants. However, I think I made mistakes as a begginer. I was told not to move plants once you put them in the ground. I moved some of them like 2 or 3 times. Also I may have over watered, my soil dries out in the heat in almost no time and when I saw my plants wilting from the hot sun I watered daily so they did not wilt. I know now after reading that it is best to let the pepper plant wilt and then water. I had bad problems with slugs eating plants up half of the summer too.
Anyway, here is why I ask for tips. The following never produced: 2 moroga scorpions, 2 red savina habaneros, 2 mustard habaneros, 1 chocolate habanero.
I had good results from my 2 filius blue, and my 1 thai plant. I also got 1 chocolate habanero and my 1 yellow devils tongue to produce by extending their grow by bringing them in before winter.
I am going to use a black plastic sheet to keep out weeds and I hear it helps maximize heat. Is there anything else I should know? I know now to not move a plant after I put it in a spot. All of my plants that never produced had tons of flowers but no fruit. I have been reading up on self polinating if you do not have the needed insects around.
I try to grow organic and I use Jobe's organic Tomato fertilizer: http://www.easygardener.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=category.display&category_ID=223
I know the fertilizer helped with my tomatoes. I had a monster cherry tomato plant over five feet in all directions. It was beautiful!
Sorry if this is long. I am ordering plants again soon and I just want to get a better result this time around. I live in Michigan, so my growing season is shorter than in other places. I was very bummed when I did not get any morugas, or barely any habaneros last year. I love habaneros, and I want to try the mustard and red savina. I am trying to grow thai, habaneros, morugas, and carolina reapers. Thanks for any advice you can give!
Dustin