+1 for Avon, those little guys should have been in at least #1 pots till they could fill out the root ball in them. Bummer to loose plants like that
. Growing can be a bitch, I'm going through my own trials right now with Batcterial Spot.
Oh, man... that stuff sucks major ass.
Good luck; and you're gonna need it, unfortunately. It really, really sucks.
My pepper garden was completely decimated last year from bacterial spot, I even saw a few peppers (not just leaves) infected. I think much of my plants' potential went down the toilet when that shit struck and then spread like wildfire. Some of my pepper plants were nearly bald by the time I got rid of all of the infected leaves... and by the next storm, there were new leaves to be removed.
I dreaded every rain, storm, and especially heavy downpour (which there were plenty of). And that's saying something; ever since I was young I was always fascinated by strong thunderstorms, and especially hurricanes and tornadoes. In other words, I actually
*liked* them. Hell, to this day strong thunderstorms have the ability to actually help me sleep for some reason (maybe I'm just ass-backwards)... but when I've got plants outside it's a different story altogether. Of course.. back then I didn't have anything of importance outside.
My porch-grown potted plants were mostly unaffected, and the front porch is where every single one of my plants are living this year. It also helps that fertilization, inspection for pests and picking fruit are all much easier in pots (gotta love their portability). This year... the ground where peppers once grew is reserved for pumpkins. Peppers just seem to do much better in containers for me.
Ironically... guess where I think my bacterial spot problem may have come from... one single jalapeno plant from Lowe's. I didn't know what those "spots" were, figured they were nothing major. And even worse? If I remember right the plant was a Mammoth Jalapeno... which was also one of the shittiest peppers I ever grew, easily the absolute worst jalapeno. It was ugly with absolutely no corking, and just as the first pepper was beginning to turn red... I go outside to see it had burst open and ants were having a field day running inside and outside of it collecting food. I pulled it out of the ground immediately at that point, and its disease haunted me all spring/summer--the entire time the plants were productive.
Oh, how I've learned... never again! If only I had tossed that POS variety sooner, or better yet never bought it to begin with. Now I know even one little brown spot on a single leaf is not to be messed with.