Hello everyone,
I live in South Florida and am an avid gardener but I have taken a liken to peppers and tobacco. I sowed many hundreds of peppers and dozens of varieties this year with intent to sell, the plants that is. Unfortunately I don't have space to grow the peppers to maturity and start a little pepper farm here. South Florida land is beyond a premium, it's reserved for a certain type of individual that isn't me.
I cannot start my seeds indoors with grow lights and heating mats, I just don't have the space. Last year I started them outdoors in basically complete shade. The would received a negligible bit of filtered sunlight each morning but that's it. Didn't work well. So I upgraded to 1020 cell trays and bottom watering trays to try and start my seeds outdoors. I made my own mix of peat moss and sand, and apply liquid kelp fertilizer occasionally, as well as a very diluted Epsom salt spray. I don't use any formulated fertilizers, only liquid kelp, compost from my own bin and mushroom compost.
Question : Can anyone pease tell my if these plants look "correct" having sown on Jan-22-2023 (one month old as of time I post this)? They have gone through a number of small cold patches but no freezes, very close at one point which destroyed parts of my coffee trees. It gets into the 60s at night right now but during the day it's bright sunlight in the 80s.
Their cotyledons seem to be in permanent prayer position, as my tobacco does at night, without going back down at night. Is the direct early spring sunlight already too much for them? Surely I cannot move them to shade right now and I'm not sure if I have options should this be the issue. I have kept them relatively watered but I removed their bottom trays and am seeing what a brief dry out period will do. I figured drying out is nowhere near important right now for young peppers as it is for older, established plants. Even a few days of neglect and they will die from previous experiences.
Lastly, how should I proceed with watering from here on out? How wet or dry should the soil be as they grow for the next few months?
Thanks everyone!
I live in South Florida and am an avid gardener but I have taken a liken to peppers and tobacco. I sowed many hundreds of peppers and dozens of varieties this year with intent to sell, the plants that is. Unfortunately I don't have space to grow the peppers to maturity and start a little pepper farm here. South Florida land is beyond a premium, it's reserved for a certain type of individual that isn't me.
I cannot start my seeds indoors with grow lights and heating mats, I just don't have the space. Last year I started them outdoors in basically complete shade. The would received a negligible bit of filtered sunlight each morning but that's it. Didn't work well. So I upgraded to 1020 cell trays and bottom watering trays to try and start my seeds outdoors. I made my own mix of peat moss and sand, and apply liquid kelp fertilizer occasionally, as well as a very diluted Epsom salt spray. I don't use any formulated fertilizers, only liquid kelp, compost from my own bin and mushroom compost.
Question : Can anyone pease tell my if these plants look "correct" having sown on Jan-22-2023 (one month old as of time I post this)? They have gone through a number of small cold patches but no freezes, very close at one point which destroyed parts of my coffee trees. It gets into the 60s at night right now but during the day it's bright sunlight in the 80s.
Their cotyledons seem to be in permanent prayer position, as my tobacco does at night, without going back down at night. Is the direct early spring sunlight already too much for them? Surely I cannot move them to shade right now and I'm not sure if I have options should this be the issue. I have kept them relatively watered but I removed their bottom trays and am seeing what a brief dry out period will do. I figured drying out is nowhere near important right now for young peppers as it is for older, established plants. Even a few days of neglect and they will die from previous experiences.
Lastly, how should I proceed with watering from here on out? How wet or dry should the soil be as they grow for the next few months?
Thanks everyone!