want more peppers?
mix up a diluted solution of Epsom salt and water in a spray bottle and spray it all over the plant when ti starts blooming. colorado soils are notoriously poor in magnesium and the pepper plants will explode with peppers.
want more peppers?
mix up a diluted solution of Epsom salt and water in a spray bottle and spray it all over the plant when ti starts blooming. colorado soils are notoriously poor in magnesium and the pepper plants will explode with peppers.
Brian H
Longmont CO
"I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do."
Great thread!
when are you sowing your garden is more of a what not to do thread at this point (with some exceptions)
Neem oil will kill or slow down 90% of the insects out there
The Great Kazoo's Feedback
"when you're happy you enjoy the melody but, when you're broken you understand the lyrics".
What ratios?
Also, in the other thread, Hollohaus alluded to pinching off blossoms on some of his plants to get more fruit. My pepper plant is currently blossoming a lot, but I don't know if I can pick off the flowers. Do the flowers develop into peppers, or will they look like peppers from the get go?
"There are no finger prints under water."
Pinching off the flowers on tomato plants until they get well established is especially important with determinate varieties. Determinate type tomatoes produce the entire crop in more or less a single harvest during a few weeks near the end of the season. Unlike indeterminate tomatoes that produce fruit throughout the season.
Determinate tomato plants virtually stop putting energy into producing roots and branches as soon as the first fruit forms. The plant's growth basically stops. So if you prevent it from setting fruit for a couple extra weeks by pinching off flowers then your plant will be bigger, stronger and produce more fruit. If you leave the flowers and let fruit form on a small plant early in the season, that plant will stay small all summer.
It isn't as important for indeterminate tomatoes but I personally still like to make sure the plant spends all of it's energy getting roots and branches established before it starts using energy on fruit.
My indeterminate heirloom tomato plants are now almost 6ft tall and will likely grow another foot or two. I started to leave the flowers alone about two weeks ago. These nice big plants will make more tomatoes than I know what to do with. My determinate tomatoes (mostly Romas) are about 5ft tall which is pretty big for the variety.
Last edited by JohnTRourke; 07-10-2014 at 17:13.
Brian H
Longmont CO
"I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do."