Dyce51 said:I am very amazed at my Giant Habaneros and Bhut Jolokia plants that I want to winter a few of them over!!! How do I do this?? I must get a new camera or borrow one so I can show the size of these babbies!!!! Unreal!!!!!
cheezydemon said:You CAN'T bring it in without serious vegetative pruning.
UNLESS.....you move to Trinidad and keep it in a sunny window OR....
Buy a $2000 light system to sustain 1 plant.
Prune all stems to just below leaf nodes.
Put it under lights, pinch flowers like crazy, pray.
Silver_Surfer said:Don't tell my second year plants that, they don't know any better.
cheezydemon said:OK! Trinidad OR....The heart of Dixie.
Here in Kentucky, hardly the antarctic, overwintering my GIGANTIC nagas would require incredible expense.
The change in light quality causes the leaves to all drop, and the long 3 foot stems drain the plant of life!
What is your secret? Oh texan?
(, all in good spirited discussion, my capsaicin brother!)
Txclosetgrower said:I just wait til mine start losing their leaves in like late January or February or so then cut them back. Then don't water them til about March when they start growing back
I've had a chile pequin I haven't moved inside once over the past 4 years.
Dyce51 said:well by January or Feb. we will have had at least a foot of snow......So should I wait till the temps drop, dig them up, replant into containers and bring them inside so they don't freeze????
cheezydemon said:OK! Trinidad OR....The heart of Dixie.
Here in Kentucky, hardly the antarctic, overwintering my GIGANTIC nagas would require incredible expense.
The change in light quality causes the leaves to all drop, and the long 3 foot stems drain the plant of life!
What is your secret? Oh texan?
cheezydemon said:(, all in good spirited discussion, my capsaicin brother!)
POTAWIE said:Chiles don't go dormant but I like to prune my plants way back, roots included, and give them low light and heat so that they go sort of semi-dormant until late winter or spring. You really have to keep an eye out for aphids and other insects that have no natural predators indoors during the winter