I've been having some problems with my peppers lately, a number of them had strange white spots under the leaves, which showed up after I moved a tomato into the garden a few months back.
I diagnosed it as whiteflies, and applied an insecticide to the plants that seemed to clear it up. Only one plant actually died, and while all the other plants which lost a majority of leaves have sprouted new leaves and are trying to come back, I feel like something is holding them back.
I'm starting to think it's a soil problem or a nutrient problem that's holding them back. All of the plants were bought at the 12" tall stage and were immediately repotted into 12" tall pots using MG potting soil. All of them have been repotted since into 5 gallon buckets with 1" of rocks on the bottom with holes in the buckets 1 inch up the sides, when going to the large buckets, the plants kept most of their soil intact and the remainder was filled with garden soil as opposed to potting soil.
I had to repot a few of them again 3 days ago into new 5 gallon buckets as my old ones were falling apart. When transplanting, I had a lot of worm casings and a number of beautiful earthworms were spotted.
One extra piece of info is we are in South Florida and when the plants started looking bad we were in a drought but now we are getting maybe an inch or two a day of rain, I doubt the pots are even coming close to drying out between rain.
Now that I've pained this picture, my question is what might be holding the plants back from growing up? I've only ever fertilized maybe once or twice in their 10-month long lives, not counting whatever fertilizer was in the MG potting soil. Is it moisture? Still more bugs? Nutrients? Or is it the soil density/drainage?
Once I sprayed the insecticide, the plants instantly stopped declining but now I would really like to see them perk up a bit for the fall harvest.
Thanks a bunch, and if need be I can snap a bunch of photos of the plants later this evening when I get home.
I diagnosed it as whiteflies, and applied an insecticide to the plants that seemed to clear it up. Only one plant actually died, and while all the other plants which lost a majority of leaves have sprouted new leaves and are trying to come back, I feel like something is holding them back.
I'm starting to think it's a soil problem or a nutrient problem that's holding them back. All of the plants were bought at the 12" tall stage and were immediately repotted into 12" tall pots using MG potting soil. All of them have been repotted since into 5 gallon buckets with 1" of rocks on the bottom with holes in the buckets 1 inch up the sides, when going to the large buckets, the plants kept most of their soil intact and the remainder was filled with garden soil as opposed to potting soil.
I had to repot a few of them again 3 days ago into new 5 gallon buckets as my old ones were falling apart. When transplanting, I had a lot of worm casings and a number of beautiful earthworms were spotted.
One extra piece of info is we are in South Florida and when the plants started looking bad we were in a drought but now we are getting maybe an inch or two a day of rain, I doubt the pots are even coming close to drying out between rain.
Now that I've pained this picture, my question is what might be holding the plants back from growing up? I've only ever fertilized maybe once or twice in their 10-month long lives, not counting whatever fertilizer was in the MG potting soil. Is it moisture? Still more bugs? Nutrients? Or is it the soil density/drainage?
Once I sprayed the insecticide, the plants instantly stopped declining but now I would really like to see them perk up a bit for the fall harvest.
Thanks a bunch, and if need be I can snap a bunch of photos of the plants later this evening when I get home.