I should have elaborated my reply a bit more... I would wait until the cutting has formed some roots, which for my climate conditions and way of working is typically after about 4-6 weeks (for peppers). I always remove most of the leaves, especially the older and/or larger ones.
If working with cuttings (in general, not only peppers), it is usually best to remove most if not all of the leaves. Transpiration (evaporation of water from the plant) occurs mainly at the leaves, so a large leaf area means more transpiration. Because cuttings lack a root system, they loose more water than they can take up if they have large and/or many leaves. Therefore, I believe, your cutting looks "droopy", "underwatered" (irony at its best). The cutting will produce new growth once it
I should have elaborated my reply a bit more... I would wait until the cutting has formed some roots, which for my climate conditions and way of working is typically after about 4-6 weeks (for peppers). I always remove most of the leaves, especially the older and/or larger ones.
If working with cuttings (in general, not only peppers), it is usually best to remove most if not all of the leaves. Transpiration (evaporation of water from the plant) occurs mainly at the leaves, so a large leaf area means more transpiration. Because cuttings lack a root system, they loose more water than they can take up if they have large and/or many leaves. Therefore, I believe, your cutting looks "droopy", "underwatered" (irony at its best). The cutting will produce new growth once it has roots.
I should have elaborated my reply a bit more... I would wait until the cutting has formed some roots, which for my climate conditions and way of working is typically after about 4-6 weeks (for peppers). I always remove most of the leaves, especially the older and/or larger ones.
If working with cuttings (in general, not only peppers), it is usually best to remove most if not all of the leaves. Transpiration (evaporation of water from the plant) occurs mainly at the leaves, so a large leaf area means more transpiration. Because cuttings lack a root system, they loose more water than they can take up if they have large and/or many leaves. Therefore, I believe, your cutting looks "droopy", "underwatered" (irony at its best). The cutting will produce new growth once it has roots.