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PIC 1's............Pod-ography.............2013

  Good Eve-ning, and Welcome to my bog...glog !

Hey folks sorry for the late glog-up I'm a month behind last years startup,...... :rolleyes: ...... I still have 12+ weeks (plenty of time) before I can start think about hardening off the plants outdoors.

First off I'd like to give a shout out to those who followed my grow last season. Thanks for all the comments, thoughts and ideas. The chuckles we shared......there were some good laughs...(and especially all the criticisms........ :liar: .......hah)

To those who are new, I try to follow a "weekend update" format with photos and captions. Although if anyone has questions or replies that needs and answer or response I'll get back during the week. I hope to keep this interesting and entertaining...

and away we go!


Garden Rewind


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Here's my 1st garden (1986)...it was modest but what we grew we used in our kitchen. I had a couple of dual bulb 4ft T12 fixtures in my basement. A couple grow-lux and daylight color temp bulbs. The indoor grow was far superior to the vegetable starts sold at the local nurseries.
My Italian neighbor couldn't understand why his bell pepper starts only had flowers while mine had golfball size peppers very early in the season.....The hot varieties I grew back then were the cayennes, orange habaneros, and a few different type or thai-birds. Things have changed but I still grow those varities.

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Here's a shot from last season. I grew around 150+ pepper plants in two different sections of the garden. Plants were grown in raised beds and containers from 5 gal up to 20 gal

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A typical weekend harvest shot from later in the season when the gardens at full swing.

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This is one of my seed catalogs, the c.chinense....the seeds that invade our gardens every year...
This book and other seed catalogs are kept in a tupperware container container on a shelve in the corner of the basement.
No elaborate system needed, The seeds are kept in 1.5" zip backs. I have seeds that are as far back as 2007, and still germinating without a hitch....theres no need to pitch. Speaking of pitching theres some old baseball card to display the size of the pages used.

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These are what I use to get the seeds on their way. I take 1/4 bag of each, mix that into a 5 gal bucket and moisten with water. The spagnum peat give fluff to the texture also helps indicate when the mix need to be re-moistened but the lighter color it displays. The vermiclite helps with water retension while letting the air and moisture through. The seed starting mix also has fine grain perlite to keep drainage and airflow moving.

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Ha..........I knew this chop stick would come in handy someday. Once the seed medium is moistened I'll make a hole with the stick 1/4" down .
The seeds will be planted at the same depth. That helps when misting the top with water. Seeds that are planted too high may dry out or seeds planted to deep may rot.

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I use two 2ft x 4ft germinating mats. Enough area to warm 8 seed flats at once...

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I don't bother with a thermostat for the mats. I run them through a timer, 2 hrs on, 1 hr off...continous. The average temp of the soil stays at +/-85 deg

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This is the main grow room. I built the 2 tier shelving units 8ft long x 2ft wide. 8 flats fit underneath the lighting units. Here we have four narrow spaced T8 4 bulb fixtures with 6500k bulbs and one 8ft TF twin bulb tight spaced fixture with 4100k bulbs. I have 4 identical systems in the room with an addition of three 400w mh fixtures with 7200k lamps. The room has 2- 20a dedicated circuits and 1-15a to split the current draw..

more photos in a few minutes....thanks for looking!
PIC 1's......Pod Pornage.............2012

















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Awesome job on the throw down Greg! Amazing work. That's the first throw down thread I've read through and was very impressed with the dishes. There are some great cooks on this website.

I first heard "Groove Me" when I was on a Blues Brothers kick in college, enjoyed their cover, but nothing like King Floyd's. The thing about the Blues Brothers is it exposed me to some awesome music. I have a decent blues collection - I love listening to a Freddie King collection I own. I saw Jr. Wells play in Lansing not too long before he died. Also saw Son Seals in your neck of the woods Greg - Kingston Mines. Good music and good times.
 
Whew !.....I had to turn down the Marantz, and turn up the computer volume... Blast from the past, I can her the popping in the groves...of the vinyl.....in the back seat........of a 65 GTO.......haha.
Annie nice play......tankx, for making my face red............lol

I'm glad to hear you're a seafood junkie. I bet you've enjoyed some great meals in varios travels.
I use alot of Octo and Squid regular and baby. I could probably fill up an inkwell with squid ink...........ha inkwells beyond my time but the grade school desks had them....a-hum, 1960ish. The hole in the desk served a purpose for gum wrappers and crumpled up love notes........yikes..

Back to the plants...How are yours?
Thanks for checking out the food deal...

GTO? Ronnie and the Daytonas? Great song! My first was a 68 Camaro SS 350. I bought it a few years used, burned a few clutches, doing stupid stuff, so my father said, "Let me trade that for something bigger." I was hesitant but agreed if I could go with him, as my uncle owned the lot and had already called him: he found a 69 Roadrunner. It was bigger, "safer," my father was thinking; I was thinking "383." Can hardly believe am in an Subbie Outback Wagon now! lol. Yeah, your food is soul music and fast cars for me.

And plants seem to have recovered well from any sorta chlorosis or just normal issues, bone-dry, fed them some Neptune's Harvest dilute at 1/4th today, bottom watered, could hear them slurping it up, some are working on 3rd set true leaves, so 1/4 teasp. Epsom salts to quart spritz/mist for magnesium and an aspirin mist, as SAR. System acquired resistance: getting ready for tomato seedlings, an almost entirely different "thing." So added ground cinnamon to the new Douglah, Ramon's MoA's, etc. pot ups. Tomato cells in waiting for seed smell like pumpkin pies dropped on humus ;) .

Yep: traveling increases the odds one will get, when dark outside in el campo, and "one" is half drunk, morcilla aka chorizo de sangre, REALLY fresh. Really, really fresh. Only thing have ever spit out . . . Calamares OTH . . . and paella del mar. Mmm. Thanks, Greg!
Annie
 
Thanks Stefan,
The plants are pushing the fense right now. I may have to weed out the slower performers before its all over.

Great man, I'm glad to hear the seeds are moving for ya. The Madame Jeanette seeds are from your seed stock. I grew them last yr from an Auzzie source.......I wasn't too happy with the germ rates and the look and taste of the pods. They were different than what I've seen, small, smooth and Habish looking.
Do your plants have the purplish hue ?

My seeds have just sprouted last week so I wouldn't know if they have a purplish hue but normally they should be green. The pods are supposed to be elongated and wrinkled like a bigger version of the Cili Goronong (and much tastier). It's the first time I'm growing this strain also, the one I had before was a Hab like you said small and smooth. It hasn't been easy to find an actually strain that is truly a Madame Jeanette, most of the times it's the Aij Umba/Adjoema that is being sold as the Jeanette. Hopefully these will grow out just as great as on the guy's pictures.

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Always amazed go browse your glog Greg. By next month your young ones will be podding up while the rest of us finally get to move it to a #2 container. Love the throw down. Got my vote !! Gotta snap a photo of your bonnets that in growing. As for the Madames. Be glad to see if they will taste any different for you. I got some seeds from JT delaney MMe jeannete. Wonder if it will be similar. As always thanks for the inspiration. !!
Playing some catch-up with some of these replies, Thanks for checking out the "TD"... With all the Bonnet talk going on I'm getting hungry for some Caribbean....hmm, I might have to do a Jamaican dish this weekend.......to get past the withdrawal symtoms. The Jeanettes will be taste tasted, again. Stefans photos look different than the variety I grew before.

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Awesome job on the throw down Greg! Amazing work. That's the first throw down thread I've read through and was very impressed with the dishes. There are some great cooks on this website.

I first heard "Groove Me" when I was on a Blues Brothers kick in college, enjoyed their cover, but nothing like King Floyd's. The thing about the Blues Brothers is it exposed me to some awesome music. I have a decent blues collection - I love listening to a Freddie King collection I own. I saw Jr. Wells play in Lansing not too long before he died. Also saw Son Seals in your neck of the woods Greg - Kingston Mines. Good music and good times.
Andy I have to agree with you, this months TD was a good one. There are some creative dishes and thought put into them. Cooking from scratch is the way to go....that's what got my interest on this one.

Love the Blues.....when I was in a band we'd warm up at practice with some or jam out at the end...playing the drums, my mind could be elsewhere...the beat went on...

I missed last years Blues Fest here, ( I was probably in the garden...ha) but its always a good one. Rain or shine, day or night my friends, wife and I would never miss it. Times have changed...actually there's lack of time nowadays on the weekends.

Another great event here is "Clapton's Crossroads"....BB King, Jeff Beck, a wide range of style pickin's.Like you said...good times,Thanks for stopping and talking shop...

GTO? Ronnie and the Daytonas? Great song! My first was a 68 Camaro SS 350. I bought it a few years used, burned a few clutches, doing stupid stuff, so my father said, "Let me trade that for something bigger." I was hesitant but agreed if I could go with him, as my uncle owned the lot and had already called him: he found a 69 Roadrunner. It was bigger, "safer," my father was thinking; I was thinking "383." Can hardly believe am in an Subbie Outback Wagon now! lol. Yeah, your food is soul music and fast cars for me.

And plants seem to have recovered well from any sorta chlorosis or just normal issues, bone-dry, fed them some Neptune's Harvest dilute at 1/4th today, bottom watered, could hear them slurping it up, some are working on 3rd set true leaves, so 1/4 teasp. Epsom salts to quart spritz/mist for magnesium and an aspirin mist, as SAR. System acquired resistance: getting ready for tomato seedlings, an almost entirely different "thing." So added ground cinnamon to the new Douglah, Ramon's MoA's, etc. pot ups. Tomato cells in waiting for seed smell like pumpkin pies dropped on humus ;) .

Yep: traveling increases the odds one will get, when dark outside in el campo, and "one" is half drunk, morcilla aka chorizo de sangre, REALLY fresh. Really, really fresh. Only thing have ever spit out . . . Calamares OTH . . . and paella del mar. Mmm. Thanks, Greg!
Annie
68 SS...White with the black striping on the hood? I miss the rear wheel drive ...burned out a few clutches in my daze, also..

I bet all your seedlings are starting to recover with "green grocer" growth and the rest are all getting bigger.You just reminded me to start looking through the tomato seeds...I'm so far behind if this were a race I'd probably be passed up the next grower....lol

Fish/Seafood....that's what I like about Hawaii. Fresh fish and so many varieties. We travel to Maui pretty often and whether its in a resturant or making it on the grill I'll have some sort of "sea offerings" everyday.

Now I'm hungry and I promised myself and wife that I'd get back in shape before summer buy eating less.......stupid promise ! My excerise today will be shoveling snow and shuffling around 40+ plant trays.

Annie enjoy your week!

Loving the sound of that Vinyl. Loving the look of those plants and if only I could smell that food! Loving it all... thanks for the sensory overload ;)
"Sensory Overload" ....i like that!

My seeds have just sprouted last week so I wouldn't know if they have a purplish hue but normally they should be green. The pods are supposed to be elongated and wrinkled like a bigger version of the Cili Goronong (and much tastier). It's the first time I'm growing this strain also, the one I had before was a Hab like you said small and smooth. It hasn't been easy to find an actually strain that is truly a Madame Jeanette, most of the times it's the Aij Umba/Adjoema that is being sold as the Jeanette. Hopefully these will grow out just as great as on the guy's pictures.

PICT0395.jpg
Stefan, I waded through the plants and found another Jeanette, same shaped leaves but green with a slight tinge of purple. It could be caused by my lighting...and some bottoming watering with Kelp.Good comparison to the Coronong. You're right they should look gnarley and twisted. If they taste better than a Coronong then I will be pleased. Although I do grow the Coronong's both yellow and now I have a red (not yellow) that I saved the seeds from. The upfront pineapple taste in refreshing in a chopped sauce.

Great update and amazing job with the throwdown wow! my mouth is watering.
Thanks Bee,Whats fun about the update is deciding what plants to photograph while stumbling across a few that I forgot I had...always a pleasent surprise. I'm glad the food looked inviting.
 
Stefan, I waded through the plants and found another Jeanette, same shaped leaves but green with a slight tinge of purple. It could be caused by my lighting...and some bottoming watering with Kelp.Good comparison to the Coronong. You're right they should look gnarley and twisted. If they taste better than a Coronong then I will be pleased. Although I do grow the Coronong's both yellow and now I have a red (not yellow) that I saved the seeds from. The upfront pineapple taste in refreshing in a chopped sauce.

It's probably because of the lighting indeed, as soon when they go outside, problem solved :) Had the same thing last year, some plants just re-act differently to the lighting then others I guess. Last year I grow the Goronong and it's a lovely variety, even more gnarly then the Madame Jeanette but when it comes to taste the Jeanette beats them. However I loved how extremely gnarly they were. I even saw a orange variety of it a while back. Interesting to know how the red one taste :)
 
It's probably because of the lighting indeed, as soon when they go outside, problem solved :) Had the same thing last year, some plants just re-act differently to the lighting then others I guess. Last year I grow the Goronong and it's a lovely variety, even more gnarly then the Madame Jeanette but when it comes to taste the Jeanette beats them. However I loved how extremely gnarly they were. I even saw a orange variety of it a while back. Interesting to know how the red one taste :)

The red taste like the yellow.. I save the smaller 12 gal pots for those and certain Habs that tend to stay medium sized. I'm getting psyched up . Just can't wait to get the boat load outdoors. I hope you find the Waialua's interesting. I'm curious to see how the production and the heat levels are in your climate. Hotter than the average Jalapeno and very productive...
 
The red taste like the yellow.. I save the smaller 12 gal pots for those and certain Habs that tend to stay medium sized. I'm getting psyched up . Just can't wait to get the boat load outdoors. I hope you find the Waialua's interesting. I'm curious to see how the production and the heat levels are in your climate. Hotter than the average Jalapeno and very productive...

Funny, so the red must be a mutation then and not a cross with another variety. Looking forward to the Waialua indeed, I did a re-sow today because only 1 germinated (I sowed it on the outer rim of my prop) and I want at least 2 plants of each variety :) I'm assuming the summers are a lot hotter over there then in my climate, average is around 72F during the summer. Last year was bad summer (again), but thanks to the poly tunnel I managed to get some decent harvests. This year I have a bigger one we're I can plant out all plants, so I can reach the proper climate for peppers better.
 
Weekend update....

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One of 3 MoA's that were reseeded do to a Hot bag of "Ocean Forest"

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Here's some of the last c.chinense to get planted......"Spikey Douglah's"

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Here's a node about a foot high on the plant...reminded of a kids "Tinker Toy"....peat dust ended up there via the high force of the fan.

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A tray of Bahamian Goats under the T8's.....but they're bending towards the 400w mh reflectors.

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A group of Japanese type plants...well overdue for a pot up...maybe tomorrow

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more Goats and Habs

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First tray of various Jalapeno's starting to perk up

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Some of the larger containers. Bonnets and a Pimenta da Neyde

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Pimenta da Neyde overwinter closeup

a few more photos shortly
 
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Here's what happens when you throw a few seeds over your shoulder into the dirt.......a bunch of seedlings emerge, together.
In this case 9 Caribbean seedlings............I like them...anybody else ?

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Ok, what I do in a situation like THAT,is to tease the roots apart. Once separated I like to drench the soil with a root stimulat to prevent any transplant shock.
In this case I didn't because all the bags of potting medium are in my garage and most are pretty damp/wet. So I decided to dunk the roots for 30 seconds in a diluted solution.before potting them up.

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And here are the 9 escapies, transplanted into their own 3" pots . I misted them with Epsom Salts and tomorrow they will be placed close to the lights.

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The basement grow with over 230+ 5" pots. Some plants are flowering while others are still waiting to fork out. The light cycle is still 16 on 8 off (overlapping).
Soon I'll swithch to 12/12. Which still gives plants direct light for 12 and indirect for the other 12.

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An Orange Primo, Luiza Yellow, Fatalii x, and a Red Scorpion

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Goat's Weed

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Maui Purple

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Chocolate Bhut getting some bud

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Yellow Brains......
 
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West Indian Yellow, Barackpore, Datil, Yellow Scotch Bonnet

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Purple Bhut Jolokia

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Here's the food shot.....if you want to see what I did with the Pickled Bonnets then check the "Cooking with Fire" forum under "Jerk Chicken"

Thanks all, Have a great week,
 
Nobody like a show off...but in your case we all make an exception Greg. Freaking wowzers! I am busy with my little grow, can't imagine dealing with pot ups on that scale!!! Amazing as always brother...hope we get some bonus shots out of you mid week this week! ;)
 
Plants seem to be showing much progress, excellent updated shots as usual and I have to agree with Shane on pot ups. Normally I have a hard time thinking about doing 20 or more and then read 200+ like its no big deal, lol. You are either related to Clark Kent da farmer or have secret helpers we don't know about ;) I&rsquo;ll be reading the foodie later this morning and comment there. Again great stuff Greg, always enjoy reading your glog ... I&rsquo;ll leave you with a great Caribbean tune that could possibly inspire me to do dem 200+ pot ups ♪ ♫ ♪ ♫ ♪
[05:04] @WalkGood &raquo;&raquo; Foobar2ooo ::: Byron Lee & the Dragonaires - Soca Tatie (1995) - 10 - Pepperseed Medley ::: 1:26/8:13 (&bull;&bull;&bull;&bull;&bull;&bull;&bull;&bull;&bull;&bull;) ::: 357 kbps &laquo;&laquo;
 
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