rds040800 said:When repotting a plant, is it necessary to remove all buds/flowers and pods? I have 4 habs and 4 tabasco plants I really have to get repotted, and my reason for asking this is my tobasco is steadily producing more and more pods but is damn near root bound.
Matt Berry said:I'm a little unorthodoxed when it comes to transplanting plants, especially rootbound seedlings from the nursery. I use to be really careful with the roots, and try not to damage them, disturb them as little as possible.
That was in my younger days. Now I really disturb the roots. I grab the transplant and split the bottom roots in half. I go around the outside of the rootball pushing, tearing, ripping them until they are free from the original container shape. The ones that I do the most are the ones that are at the bottom, especially if there are a lot of them. I will split them into 4 pieces, and untangle parts of them (not genteelly).
None of my plants have died from this treatment, and actually seem to grow bigger, are more healthy, then when I use to be so careful with the plants.
Silver_Surfer said:BTW, "most" plants I repot haven't formed pods yet (unless I get lazy and slow on the needed transfer) since I've been jumping from the 16oz cups to the #5 pot. Next year I intend to step up gradually in size and see if the plants benefit as noted by others here.
rds040800 said:I can say that I have noticed a significant difference in the ones that went straight to a large pot as opposed to ones that have been gradually potted up. My Bhut that was moved to a 6in wide pot then to a 10in wide pot is taller than the plant in a 5 gal bucket, and when I say taller, thats with both pots sitting side by side.
Matt Berry said:Out of 2 serranos I have one was potted up slowly the other went straight from the 4" pot to a 10 gallon pot. The funny thing is the one that went straight from the 4" to it's permanent home is way ahead of the one that was potted up more slowly. The one that was gradually stepped up isn't nearly as bushy or as tall as the one that just had the one step.
Maybe different cultivars respond differently to being potted up, and Serrano don't like it.
Blister said:You also have to be very careful on the amount of water you give it because the plant isn't big enough to use all the moisture the soil can hold when it's in a much larger pot. You need to water according to plant size, not pot size. The generally accepted practice is to put enough water into the pot so that it drips out of the drain holes in the bottom. Do that with a small plant in a larger pot and you'll kill the plant in the worst case, or start growing fungus at the very least.