Problem: cooler temps and midnight sun during summer
I'll be doing tests next season with C. pubescens to see if they tend to produce a little better than the other species that I've seen up here. It seems that the first season plants of C. chinense and C. baccatum have some trouble with blooming during summer. I have yet to try it with older plants but I have 6 second and third year plants that I'm working with right now so I can make observations. Alaska is well known for growing some world record setting vegetables (believe it or not) but the midnight sun can be disruptive to the root system growth and bloom patterns for tropical nightshades like tomatoes and obviously peppers.
Have you noticed that a certain species over the others tends to tolerate cooler summers and the midnight sun better? I'm only assuming (probably because I read it somewhere) that C. pubescens will be more tolerant but it may be false...not sure. I'll also be trying it with a couple of wilds like C. eximium and C. chacoense
Are there any tricks other than indoor growing that allow for successful blooming and production of first year plants?
The soil is obviously very fertile (and loaded with nutritious volcanic ash here on the Kenai Peninsula)... but is the kind of arctic soils I'm dealing with conducive to growing peppers?
I'll be doing tests next season with C. pubescens to see if they tend to produce a little better than the other species that I've seen up here. It seems that the first season plants of C. chinense and C. baccatum have some trouble with blooming during summer. I have yet to try it with older plants but I have 6 second and third year plants that I'm working with right now so I can make observations. Alaska is well known for growing some world record setting vegetables (believe it or not) but the midnight sun can be disruptive to the root system growth and bloom patterns for tropical nightshades like tomatoes and obviously peppers.
Have you noticed that a certain species over the others tends to tolerate cooler summers and the midnight sun better? I'm only assuming (probably because I read it somewhere) that C. pubescens will be more tolerant but it may be false...not sure. I'll also be trying it with a couple of wilds like C. eximium and C. chacoense
Are there any tricks other than indoor growing that allow for successful blooming and production of first year plants?
The soil is obviously very fertile (and loaded with nutritious volcanic ash here on the Kenai Peninsula)... but is the kind of arctic soils I'm dealing with conducive to growing peppers?