as long as it doesn't drop below 55, they will eek it out, but they wont be happy. I over wintered a orange hab once. Thought to myself, Ill transplant it into the garden come spring and get an ass load of peppers! It didn't grow to half the size of the ones I started that winter. Overwintering seems like too much work for no real gains, at least compared to starting a new batch in climates where you can grow outside. I'm curious if any inside growers have done a side by side "yield" comparison where they recorded yields from an overwintered plant verses a starter.Spicy Mushroom said:My oldest currently are a Serrano and Dragon Cayenne at 3 years. I have a bed with 18 plants I am going to keep overwintering with a pvc hoop house that fits over the bed. My aim is to keep them alive as long as they're willing.
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3 years isn't even close to the oldest among members here.
You tried it once, and have since decided it is a bad way to go about things? My experience with over winters is quite the opposite.. Of my 20+ peppers started this winter from seed, my over wintered Savina is miles ahead. It currently has a bunch of pods and over 50 buds. My seeds from this season are just now going into their summer pots as we are still waiting out the last frost of the season.Topsmoke said:as long as it doesn't drop below 55, they will eek it out, but they wont be happy. I over wintered a orange hab once. Thought to myself, Ill transplant it into the garden come spring and get an ass load of peppers! It didn't grow to half the size of the ones I started that winter. Overwintering seems like too much work for no real gains, at least compared to starting a new batch in climates where you can grow outside. I'm curious if any inside growers have done a side by side "yield" comparison where they recorded yields from an overwintered plant verses a starter.
ÂTopsmoke said:
I said it was my experience. In your climate it absolutely makes sense. For me zone 6b/7, it didnt pay.LordHill said:You tried it once, and have since decided it is a bad way to go about things? My experience with over winters is quite the opposite..
Yea, I am always a little jealous of people in better pepper climates. I am zone 5.. at best lolTopsmoke said:I said it was my experience. In your climate it absolutely makes sense. For me zone 6b/7, it didnt pay.
heres a pic of me standing next to a moruga, I start them in doors in Feb, transplant in May, this pic is from September. My season ends in October. Im 5'8"
ÂLordHill said:Yea, I am always a little jealous of people in better pepper climates. I am zone 5.. at best lol
Only 2 reasons I would ever move from here. Internet (only downside to the woods in the middle of nowhere) and better pepper growing. Other than those 2 things, I love it here. Winter and allmrgrowguy said:Â
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hehe, things are nice here in climate zone 8 but we pay the price in rent/mortgage. Orange County, Ca
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But I do get to keep my plants out all year round as long as they're not seedlings going into winter. Gets a tad cold for immature plants.
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I have a Trinidad Moruga Scorpion that I planted out this year after losing [it's mother] a huge tree of a pepper plant to transplant shock last year. So, after this one grows for a few years, I'm hoping to have a huge tree of TMS peppers!
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