• Blog your pepper progress. The first image in your first post will be used to represent your Glog.

PaulG 2012

I'm chomping at the bit to get started with some new chilli varieties this coming Spring. So far I've just scratched the surface with Poblanos, Jalapenos and Serranos, all of which I really like. I've been egged on by a new Second Generation Mejicano neighbor as we've talked about hot chillis over the back fence! He helped me make some Pico de Gallo with my Serranos and Early Girl tomatoes and has some great recipes from his mother and grandmother. Hopefully I'll be able to share some of them on this forum in the future. I need to grow more Cilantro. Oh yeah!

I've ordered seed from several sources which received at least a few good comments on this forum (6/12 - items crossed out did not germ, or weren't planted this year):

US Hot Stuff:
Bolivian Rainbow
Yellow Peter
Nosegay
Trinidad Scorpion (from Spankycolts)
Devil Tongue

The Hippy Seed Company: Seed Packet Mixes
NuMex Twilight (from Siliman)
Yellow Jellybeans
Tom Thumbs
Wild Texas Tepin

Refining Fire: Seed Packet Mix
Scotch Bonnet
Chocolate Habanero
Jamaican Red Mushroom

New Mexico State University:
Chiltepin
Omnicolor
Red Carribean Habanero
Orange Habanero

Pepper Gal:
Aji Yellow (request from a Peruvian friend of ours!)
Thai Hot

Peppermania:
Inca Lost
Fatali
White Habanero (from Spanky)
Red Savina (cross with Fatali, from Spanky)
Bishop's Crown
Inca Red Drop
Orange Rocoto
Congo Trinidad

I doubt I will be able to try all of these out this year, but I have saved my seeds in small glass jars with tight-fitting lids for storage over the next year. I have been saving seed from other garden produce and have had good luck with germinating them after two or even three years. The jars are stored in boxes in the garage for a cool dark location for them. I have ordered several compact varieties with an eye toward trying to winter over some of my plants this year. Since I didn't even know peppers were perennial, I can say I've already learned something from this forum!


I purchased a small greenhouse from One Stop Gardens (via Harbor Freight) for $300 four years ago. This is one of the greenhouse kits I've noticed in the greenhouse advertsing bar at the bottom of some of the pages on this forum. This picture is from Spring/ Summer 2011. You can see my tomato and pepper starts on the sheves. I winter over some bonsai trees and jade plants as well as geraniums, begonias and Gerbera Daisies. In the winter, I use a small space heater (visible on ground in the picture) to keep the temp at 40F during the few cold weeks we experience here. So far it has worked pretty well. If overwintering pepper plants becomes a reality I'll be making more room in the greenhouse! I've started a thread in the Grow Tech forum to discuss issues which crop up with these units.

greenhousepan11a.jpg


January 14, 2012:

Composting:

Okay, I need to do something outside. I know, I'll dig out a compost bin. We've had a little dry cool weather, so the worms have burrowed down, and the compost is crumbly, if a tad wet.

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The first step - dig out the bin and sift the material. I use a homemade frame with a layer of 1/4 inch plastic hardware cloth backed with a layer of one inch mesh poultry netting. The fine stuff goes into the wheelbarrow, the coarse stuff into an adjacent compost bin we're still building up.

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The bin on the left is covered to keep the leafy material dry and fluffy. The dry leaves are an important layer in the compost 'cake'. The bin on the right is the one I'm digging out. Nice, dark and crumbly with lots of worms! The sifter is on the wheelbarrow, and some of the coarse stuff is already on the active compost bin in the middle. The bin in the back is resting for several of months. It has a black plastic hardware cloth cover to keep out squirrels and racoons.

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The bin is all dug out. I left about two inches of broken up compost on the bottom of the hole to create a space for the worms to move into. You can see the bin in the middle has a layer of coarse stuff spread out on the top.

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The last step is to put a nice deep layer of dry leaves on the bin we just dug out. Now that bin will rest for a at least several months or more while the earthworms move into the compost/earth interface and do their work. That will make a great base for the next cycle of composting in this bin. I put a thin layer of leaves on the middle bin, too. Now there's a nice layer cake of dirt/compost, leaves. kitchen scraps. All small yard clippings except grass go into the compost bins, even tomato vines and pepper branches and twigs. I don't even chop stuff up too much. I try to have at least 10 or 12 layers of stuff built up before I cover the bin with a layer of dirt/compost and let the worms work for several months. I'm getting about 12-18 cubic feet of compost from these bins a year. My goal is to become 'soil self-sufficient' at some point, perhaps only having to procure horticultural pumice or vermiculite and some peat moss every so often.

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The good stuff. It will go into a plastic, vented storage bin for at lest eight weeks to cure a bit. Then I mix it with a little peat moss and some vermiculite or pumice for aeration. In my large containers, I add 2 or 3 inches of compost worked into the top of the container only every year. I try not to mix up the soil layers in the big containers very much, letting the nutrients percolate down through the soil as in a natural setting. As the blog continues this summer, I'll include photos of the irrigation system and containers I use to grow my tomatoes and peppers, and a few other things.
 
Enjoyed your video! Your voice matches your profile photo.

Forgot how much I liked Japanese maples. Can't really grow them, or blueberries, rhododendrons, or azaleas here. :mope:

Your tomato plants are huge already! Mine aren't even a foot tall yet, though some of them are already starting to bloom. I sowed mine outdoors in milk jugs back in March. Your peppers are way ahead of mine too! Guess I'll be one of the last people at THP to harvest ripe pods.

Good job on your first video!
 
Garden tour video was great. Plants are looking good as always and really starting to get big. Great job.
Thanks for looking in, Ben. Hope all is well down in SoCal!
Enjoyed your video! Your voice matches your profile photo.
You mean only half there :lol: Thank you, Bonnie, I'm glad you liked it.
Forgot how much I liked Japanese maples. Can't really grow them, or blueberries, rhododendrons, or azaleas here. :mope:
We practically live in a temperate rain forest here. Has its moments, but we have good growing conditions for the most part. Not the same on the east side of the state - more like your situation. My dad grew rhodys under a lattice canopy - kind of like Fernandos chile house. They were his pride and joy. And the roses!
Your tomato plants are huge already! Mine aren't even a foot tall yet, though some of them are already starting to bloom. I sowed mine outdoors in milk jugs back in March. Your peppers are way ahead of mine too! Guess I'll be one of the last people at THP to harvest ripe pods.
But they will be humdingers. Once you get your grow season really goin' your plants will make up for lost time, for sure. If you can irrigate, growing in the high desert can be pretty awesome!
Good job on your first video!
Thanks for looking, Bonnie.

Great job with the video! I really love your hardening shelf, and I'm thinking of stealing the idea :P
Thanks, Stefan! I'm sure if you have an idea of what you want before
you start, yours will be much better. This one is kind of like Microsoft
software. Just fixes on top of patches :D

Thanks for looking, bro!
 
I really enjoyed the walk through your garden. It is just like I thought. :dance: Perfect :dance: . All your plants look prestine.
Jamie, you are too generous with your compliments,
but they are much appreciated. Thank you. Just a side bar:
I chopped up a couple of your mystery annuums into some
lasagna my wife made tonight. The largest must have had
30 seeds in it! They are growing on me a little : ) - The lasagna
wasn't spicy enough, so i had to sprinkle about a teaspoon of
Shane's Manzano/Thai powder on it to punch it up a little! You
have created a monster. The nose and lip burn is lingering
after dinner is over - way cool! I'm going to germinate some
of those next season! Thanks!

Loved the walkthrough Paul. Your garden is wonderful. Plants look great.
Thanks, Brian. Glad you enjoyed our little corner of the world!
Good growin' to you, bud!

Great video Paul, and that irrigation system looks pretty amazing!
Thanks, Matt, means a lot from the video king!
I'm not sure amazing is the word i'd use, but
despite the convoluted meanderings, it gets the
water to where it needs to be! You can do a lot with
garden hose!

Hope you are having a good week, bro!

You got some real beauties there Paul! Loved the vid man. Good job!
Thanks, Jamison. Glad you stopped by for a look.
Take care, bud.

very nice video and amazing garden i want a garden like that ...
Pinoy, your day is coming. In a few years we're all going to be saying
we wish we had a garden like Pinoy in Hawai'i! You get that clay
amended, and just stand back! The beautiful island climate will take
care of the rest!

Nice update Paul. You earned a senior moment or two. Watch you don't hose you buddies nuts in the rhody bed.
His nuts seem to wind up all over the garden :shocked:

I must pull a dozen oak seedlings every year :lol:

Thanks for making me feel better about my senior moments.
It won't make them go away, but now I don't care as much :D

Thanks for looking in, pr0d. I appereciate the visit. Have a good week!
 
Nice video update Paul!! Very cool. Nice space and I love how the growing of your chillis has spilled over into helping you grow some great tomatoes as well.
 
Fantastic Paul...You can hear the love in your voice as you speak about each plant. So glad I found this forum where I get to know cool folks like you! Keep 'em green buddy!
Shane
The feeling is mutual, Shane. People who like plants can't be all bad!
Thanks for stopping by, my friend.
 
Lovin the vid paul! Great yard! love all the variety. Your quit the master at getting the most of out your space. Its always fun to hear peoples voice whos writing you know so well. haha
 
Thanks for the video tour of your place Paul. You've got some good looking stuff planted out there, and a rare sunny day to shoot the vid. Cheers
 
Great video Paul!!
Can i ask, did you use some sort of tripod on wheels or something, or a cam with some sort of 'steadying feature'...as it's so smooth from one thing to the next!?
Most video's on the net are shaky as hell and zooming in and out like mad, and focussing in and out etc...but this just flowed from one thing to the next. Top job :)
 
Lovin the vid paul! Great yard! love all the variety. Your quit the master at getting the most of out your space. Its always fun to hear peoples voice whos writing you know so well. haha
Thanks for looking, Britt! The yard has sort of evolved by fits and starts,
but when everything is growing, it covers up the rough edges!

Been to the mountains lately? I only got in one ski backpacking trip this season.
Dang! Hope to get a few wilderness trips in this summer - will be on the
lookout for wild chiles :lol:

Thanks for the video tour of your place Paul. You've got some good looking stuff planted out there, and a rare sunny day to shoot the vid. Cheers
Thanks, Rick. we've actually had some sun for three days in a row :dance:
Hope your grow is rockin' along, buddy!

Great video Paul!!
Can i ask, did you use some sort of tripod on wheels or something, or a cam with some sort of 'steadying feature'...as it's so smooth from one thing to the next!?
Most video's on the net are shaky as hell and zooming in and out like mad, and focussing in and out etc...but this just flowed from one thing to the next. Top job :)
Thanks for the generous review, Neil! I used my Nikon S550 pocket
camera and just tried to keep it level and walk steady. Fortunately
when I uploaded it to YouTube, it said it "appeared my video might
be shaky, would I like them to fix it?" It took a few minutes, but I
guess it worked!

Take care, bro, and good growin' to ya!
 
I'm surprised that the YouTube app worked. I start with the assumption that those types of programs wont help much so I don't tend to try them. Thanks for the info!
 
I'm surprised that the YouTube app worked. I start with the assumption that those types of programs wont help much so I don't tend to try them. Thanks for the info!
Not sure how much it actually did, I didn't pay any attention.
It didn't crash my system, so I guess that's a bonus! You are
probably smart!
 
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