hi,
i just joined and posted in the welcome forum. this is my 1st pepper posting. i looked at the forums and i think this is the correct place for this post. if not please tell me where it should be.
ok, i have a problem. i'm a fairly experienced organic gardener, i have been at it for 20 years. i just started to grow hot peppers in 2009. this year i have 1 fatalli that is about 12" tall and 20" wide and 1 scotch bonnet just a little shorter and less in diameter and what was supposed to be 3 long red slim cayenne but were mislabeled and appear to be long red thick cayenne..
everything was fine until tropical storm irene blew in last sunday 8/28. initially the winds were from the south then as the storm passed they came from the north. when i went into the garden monday 8/29 the fatalli plant looked fine but was leaning at a 45 degree angle. at the ground around it's base was a hole about 2 to 2.5 inches from the plant being pushed back and forth by the winds. the scotch bonnet was not moved by the winds. things looked ok for the following days but on friday 9/2 i saw all the leaves were wilting badly. i had last watered on friday 8/26 but since irene dropped 9" of rain i hadn't watered since. but since the plant was wilting i gave it 2 gallons of water with neptune's harvest fish emulsion as it was the time to fertilize all the plants. on saturday it looked no better so i gave it another 2 gallons of plain water. today it is still wilted all the leaves are still drooping down tho it doesn't look worse than on friday. i'm worried it will die. the peppers might be drying out not ripening tho they feel firm still. i need another 2-3 weeks for them to ripen before the sun is too weak to sustain the plant, by 10/1 gardening is pretty much over for warm weather crops here.
are the leaves wilting from the plant being pushed around that caused broken roots? could something be eating the roots like a vole causing the wilting? i tend to doubt that because the scotch bonnet is next to the fatalli and it is fine. 4' away are 3 cayenne plants which are also fine.
what can i do to get the plant to hydrate? i assume watering it is not helping since i've given it 4 gallons between friday and saturday. most of the peppers are still green tho some are turning yellow and like i said i need more time to get them to ripen. i don't have a digital camera so i can't post any pictures but i think you get the picture here.
thanks for nay advice you can offer.
tom
i just joined and posted in the welcome forum. this is my 1st pepper posting. i looked at the forums and i think this is the correct place for this post. if not please tell me where it should be.
ok, i have a problem. i'm a fairly experienced organic gardener, i have been at it for 20 years. i just started to grow hot peppers in 2009. this year i have 1 fatalli that is about 12" tall and 20" wide and 1 scotch bonnet just a little shorter and less in diameter and what was supposed to be 3 long red slim cayenne but were mislabeled and appear to be long red thick cayenne..
everything was fine until tropical storm irene blew in last sunday 8/28. initially the winds were from the south then as the storm passed they came from the north. when i went into the garden monday 8/29 the fatalli plant looked fine but was leaning at a 45 degree angle. at the ground around it's base was a hole about 2 to 2.5 inches from the plant being pushed back and forth by the winds. the scotch bonnet was not moved by the winds. things looked ok for the following days but on friday 9/2 i saw all the leaves were wilting badly. i had last watered on friday 8/26 but since irene dropped 9" of rain i hadn't watered since. but since the plant was wilting i gave it 2 gallons of water with neptune's harvest fish emulsion as it was the time to fertilize all the plants. on saturday it looked no better so i gave it another 2 gallons of plain water. today it is still wilted all the leaves are still drooping down tho it doesn't look worse than on friday. i'm worried it will die. the peppers might be drying out not ripening tho they feel firm still. i need another 2-3 weeks for them to ripen before the sun is too weak to sustain the plant, by 10/1 gardening is pretty much over for warm weather crops here.
are the leaves wilting from the plant being pushed around that caused broken roots? could something be eating the roots like a vole causing the wilting? i tend to doubt that because the scotch bonnet is next to the fatalli and it is fine. 4' away are 3 cayenne plants which are also fine.
what can i do to get the plant to hydrate? i assume watering it is not helping since i've given it 4 gallons between friday and saturday. most of the peppers are still green tho some are turning yellow and like i said i need more time to get them to ripen. i don't have a digital camera so i can't post any pictures but i think you get the picture here.
thanks for nay advice you can offer.
tom