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Thread: In the Garden 2017
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01-10-2017, 06:33 PM #1
In the Garden 2017
I am excited about the coming year.
One plan is to grow some HOT peppers. Here is a link to 16 peppers.
The spiciest peppers in the worldIf you don't care where you are, you are not lost.
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to rolodave For This Useful Post:
dinnermint (01-10-2017), Hirlau (01-10-2017)
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01-10-2017, 06:54 PM #2
I've had really good crops of habaneros here. I don't know if it is the climate or soil but they thrived when I planted them.
2016 was a poor gardening year. We are going to move the container gardens to another spot of the back yard. Hopefully an increase in sunlight will turn things around.
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01-10-2017, 06:59 PM #3
When I first saw this thread, I thought to myself "He better not be gardening in January with this weather!" Its about 38 degF, rainy and crazy windy up here...
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01-10-2017, 08:17 PM #4
Last season for super-hots I grew Infinity 7-Pods and Caramel Bhuts. I started the indoors prior to the previous Christmas. I pruned them according to the method found here
I grew them in mostly 7 gallon buckets.
I had 12 plants including 4 paper lantern habaneros. In August I was getting this many every 5-7 days.
I kept notes of the whole process and had a lot of fun doing it. The Infinities had excellent flavor and tremendous heat. I'm not doing them this year though because it really took over a lot of space indoors until I could move them out. If I had to do it again I would wait until something like mid January, maybe next week, to get started. I also found that adding epsom salt with every other watering, along with mild fertilizer prevented them from becoming chlorotic and dropping leaves. I got my seeds from the Hippy Seed Company in Australia and they had great germination especially considering super-hots are sometimes bad germinators. I did use a heat pad to help the seeds pop.Last edited by xiaotuzi; 01-10-2017 at 08:47 PM. Reason: insert better picture
"Go easy"
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01-10-2017, 08:28 PM #5
Those pepper plants look like trees!
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02-01-2017, 05:37 PM #6
Just ordered my pepper seeds and two tomatos. I have plenty of tomato seeds left over from last year. I have had good luck using year old seeds.
From the Florida Tomato Growers Supply:
Bhut Jolokia Red (ghost pepper)
Chiltepin
Habanero red
Jalapeno M
1884 Heirloom Tomato
Wild Cherry Tomato
I had a Chiltepin plant in Texas. Moved it to three houses. Got the seed for the plant from a location on the King Ranch. These peppers grew wild all over south Texas. They are hot and tiny.If you don't care where you are, you are not lost.
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03-30-2017, 09:12 PM #7
Or plant romaine lettuce.
It favors the cool weather.Mike
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04-02-2017, 11:24 PM #8
Well the winter was hard on my strawberry plants that I planted last year but the first blossoms popped out today!
Our house is as Neil left it- an Aladdins cave of 'stuff'.
Kim X
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04-03-2017, 12:03 AM #9
[QUOTE=cudarunner;1726122]Well the winter was hard on my strawberry plants that I planted last year but the first blossoms popped out today!
QUOTE]
Ours barely look alive. Snow forecast for Thursday.If you don't care where you are, you are not lost.
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04-03-2017, 12:11 AM #10
My strawberries have poked up. Not to worried as we should be in the clear weather wise
Look sharp and smell nice for the ladies.~~~Benz
Imperfection is beauty, madness is genius and it's better to be absolutely ridiculous than absolutely boring ― Marilyn Monroe