Should You Pick Early Pepper Flowers?

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  • Опубликовано: 16 июн 2024
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    / peppergeek
    In this video, I answer a common question for pepper growers: Should I pick early pepper flower buds? It is typical to see early flowers blooming on young, indoor pepper plants. The plants are entering the fruiting stage, but isn't it a bit early for them to produce peppers?
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    Read more about pruning pepper flowers:
    peppergeek.com/pinching-off-p...
    ***********************************************
    In This Video:
    0:00 - Intro
    0:56 - Should you pick pepper flowers
    2:02 - How to prune pepper flowers
    2:58 - When to STOP picking pepper flowers
    3:51 - When NOT to pick pepper flowers
    ***********************************************
    Pruning or cutting pepper flowers is a great way to increase pepper yields in the long run. As long as your growing season is long enough, you should cut any early flower buds to encourage the plants to grow more leaves and branches. Once the plants have been outdoors for 2-4 weeks, you can stop cutting off flowers and allow them to produce fruits.
    Thanks for watching!
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 430

  • @zachwak
    @zachwak 3 года назад +372

    Do a side by side, one with picking early flowers and one without!

    • @srijonsarkarclass7erollnum592
      @srijonsarkarclass7erollnum592 3 года назад

      @Damian Trey my pepper plant flowers are all drying up.
      A good sized tree ,about 2and 1/2years old .looks pretty healthy. What to do.

    • @ruifang700
      @ruifang700 3 года назад +3

      Great idea

    • @weakgang2208
      @weakgang2208 3 года назад +2

      @@srijonsarkarclass7erollnum592 Make sure the plants have at least 8 hours of light a day, fertilize them with rock phosphate, and keep the soil moist but don’t overwater and don’t let dry out.

    • @0ater
      @0ater 3 года назад +6

      i have 3 scotch bonnets growing rn that are just now producing buds, i may experiment with snipping them off on one of them to see what happens

    • @LCaaroe
      @LCaaroe 3 года назад +14

      That would require actual effort. These gardening channels love to just sit and talk.

  • @UrbanGardeningWithD.A.Hanks14
    @UrbanGardeningWithD.A.Hanks14 2 года назад +16

    I was going to give this a thumbs up, but then I saw I already had, so I must have enjoyed it at some earlier point as well, LOL. Keep the info coming!

  • @ellescott4229
    @ellescott4229 2 года назад +5

    Okay, first time pepper grower here. Pulled the tiny blooms today, it was hard. 😳😊

  • @kanthvickram4490
    @kanthvickram4490 3 года назад +3

    certainly you are an authority on this subject of pepper plants, and it is lucky for us to learn from you, a lot. thank you so much for so much information.

  • @zeetay1867
    @zeetay1867 2 года назад +40

    Just started growing recently. You're one of the most reliable sources of information on peppers. I always look to you when I have a question. Subscribed. Keep up the great work!

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  2 года назад +5

      Thank you! So glad you found us and appreciate the nice words. Welcome :)

    • @Ira88881
      @Ira88881 2 года назад +1

      Same here!!!

  • @247KW
    @247KW 3 года назад +90

    Always pick off the first flower buds. It allows the plant to grow. I do this and omg I end up with so many peppers and such a strong plant

    • @gregragincajun7968
      @gregragincajun7968 3 года назад

      Did you ever try to pick off the flowers again after the second time when the flowers try to come out again?

    • @247KW
      @247KW 3 года назад +4

      @@gregragincajun7968 No. I usually just pick the first ones that bloom. Then plant starts growing taller and thicker.

    • @gregragincajun7968
      @gregragincajun7968 3 года назад +1

      Ok ty

    • @derekmcewen3631
      @derekmcewen3631 3 года назад +1

      Thanks for the condensed answer !

    • @crazycarl00
      @crazycarl00 3 года назад +1

      Yeah but when do you stop? I only got mine transplanted at the end of May and finally started getting flowers here within the last couple of weeks. I picked the first two flowers on my reaper, but now I'm getting way more buds and I'm not so sure I should keep going with plucking the flowers.

  • @unsettld
    @unsettld Год назад +13

    I've been training my Carolina reaper for a few years now, plucking the flowers here and there (still got a few pods) but recently I've committed to pruning all flowers and the growth has been phenomenal.
    I live in an equatorial climate so no seasons except for hot, cold (18°C) and rain all year round.. at this point my pepper looks more like an ornamental bush with plenty of shoots and constant growth..
    Personally I would like to keep my plant in this state as it's definitely happy.
    Previously when allowing it to fruit I noticed that the plant really drained and lost a lot of its mass.

  • @jonlouis2582
    @jonlouis2582 3 года назад +8

    Very interesting. I transplanted one of mine into a big pot from the garden and gave it a severe pruning. It has done great and now I want it to grow more leaves, so I will start removing the flowers. Right now it is covered with buds!

  • @Ira88881
    @Ira88881 2 года назад +12

    I did a comparison with two Red Thai Ornamental plants in the same very large pot. One I didn’t pull the flowers, the other, I pulled the flowers for around a week. They were both mature and had always been outside and hardened in this same pot.
    The picked plant not only grew much larger, but twice the pods. So…
    I’m a fan, but on one or two of my other varieties, I don’t have the patience and want to see some ripe peppers ASAP!

  • @OSGCourtWatch
    @OSGCourtWatch 3 года назад +13

    Another good video. We plant out early to mid May here in pdx and generally top at least once and pick off flowers for the first month. Last year we did not prune as vigorously and noticed our peppers were a bit smaller and more spindly than prior years (thoughstill fine). Was especially noticeable on our bells. Also, we try to prune after the first flush of peppers comes on and plants produce a ton more blooms as they try to reproduce before they die...

  • @theresasilver1712
    @theresasilver1712 3 года назад +3

    Amazing info in your videos. Some years I have a few peppers even though I have a lot of plants and other years, I have a bumper crop.

  • @danopine
    @danopine 3 года назад +12

    Thank you, perfect timing, just repotted 2 weeks ago and have many buds on a 6" plant. Going to top and remove flowers ASAP.

  • @eliasromero6100
    @eliasromero6100 2 года назад +11

    Thank you so much dude. I'm new to growing peppers, always wanted too, but didn't have the space till now. I'm trying a few this season and honestly, your videos help me so much. Just filtering out the useful information, giving direct answers, and expressing your experience is something I am very very grateful for. So thank you, and keep up with the awesome videos!!!

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  2 года назад +1

      That means a lot, I’m glad you’ve found our channel helpful so far. Good luck this season!

  • @Shelzbells
    @Shelzbells 3 года назад +4

    Besides tomatoes, I am also a pepper geek.....glad I stumbled onto your channel.

  • @julienewlun6420
    @julienewlun6420 Месяц назад

    Exactly my question... about picking blossoms on a small plant or not. My thought was yes, pick... but you confirmed what I suspected. Thanks!

  • @brgovender8879
    @brgovender8879 2 месяца назад

    Another great video. Very informative. Thanks for giving us a detailed description.

  • @3TEXAN
    @3TEXAN 2 года назад

    Just found your channel. Starting my first garden. Thanks for all the information.

  • @marct7905
    @marct7905 2 года назад +2

    Exactly. I feed high N and K after it established its root system. In my climate I get most BELL peppers in the fall since they don't like temps above 80F in fruiting.

  • @danlewis1871
    @danlewis1871 3 года назад +2

    Very valuable advice and timely. Thanks

  • @p.pinchelette2909
    @p.pinchelette2909 3 года назад +3

    Cool content dude. Thanks for doing these.

  • @juliewood823
    @juliewood823 3 года назад +2

    Thanks I had concerns but you helped me 👍🏽

  • @rajeshtamhane
    @rajeshtamhane Год назад +2

    Thanks Calvin and Crystal for these great videos. I noticed flowers on my West Indies Habanero today and wasn't sure if I should pinch them off. and then I saw your video

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  Год назад

      Thank you for your support! I'm glad you found us and hope your habaneros give you a great harvest. ❤️‍🔥

  • @sonshineandsong
    @sonshineandsong 3 года назад

    OH and I subscribed too! I need a pepper geek in my life.❤️

  • @JeremyPlaysSax
    @JeremyPlaysSax 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for the info! Makes sense especially for the last part.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +1

      Glad you thought it was helpful!

  • @davemiller8203
    @davemiller8203 Год назад +1

    You've provided lots of good advice Nd have answered a couple of my questions. Great video! Thank you.

  • @afinecupofcoffee8476
    @afinecupofcoffee8476 3 года назад +9

    I recently purchased a tray of poblanos from a local nursery. Put them directly into five-gallon buckets and this morning I noticed they had buds. But they're still pretty small. They have been outside a month so I plucked them off. I feel the plant needs to at least double in height before it's strong enough for those big fruit.

  • @FU-Utube
    @FU-Utube 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the quick info!

  • @alextabrett267
    @alextabrett267 3 года назад +5

    Great video, you got yourself another subscriber here. Im actually really new to this, but I just germinated 5 Carolina reapers & 6 Trinidad Moruga scorpions, got some nice strong looking sprouts going in about 2 weeks. Hoping they turn out great like your plant. Thanks for the great info aswell.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +2

      Sounds great, thanks for subbing, glad to have you here!

  • @didanz100
    @didanz100 3 года назад +8

    I’ve started over winter them with great success. In the third year.

  • @quantafitness6088
    @quantafitness6088 Год назад

    Just what I wanted to know. Thank you!

  • @chickasawmike1319
    @chickasawmike1319 3 года назад +4

    My peppers are having a hard time due to three weeks of rain and 100% humidity right after I planted them. Now it is 92 with 100% humidity and they are drooping a little bit. So I am going to trim those flowers off for a couple of weeks at least.

  • @topixfromthetropix1674
    @topixfromthetropix1674 3 года назад +9

    I grew outside and noticed the Thai reds, Poblano, and bells did well in slightly acidic soil.

  • @laurenwesseler9680
    @laurenwesseler9680 3 года назад +3

    Great I’ll pick mine off my plants.

  • @brandyshaw6303
    @brandyshaw6303 3 года назад +1

    Thank you! Definitely subscribing

  • @jackiecollins7782
    @jackiecollins7782 6 месяцев назад +1

    This has been very helpfull thk u so much fairly new to grown own foods had some hit n misses lol but battling on some great tips here will look for heatmatts for seadling ❤ watching from UK 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🇬🇧

  • @joec0914
    @joec0914 Год назад

    Fishers Island Lemonade!! Good choice. Love that stuff in the summer.

  • @Infiniti25
    @Infiniti25 3 года назад +9

    I’d guess it pays to find out the total lifecycle length from germination to mature fruit for your region. Then work out if you can start the peppers indoors earlier in the year, pick the first flowers off and still get it into the ground and receive a good harvest.
    Trial and error following others great general advice.

  • @chillipepperenthooziest3730
    @chillipepperenthooziest3730 Год назад +2

    Generally if you're topping your pepper plants what you'll find is more often than not the top part of the main stem that your cutting off already has pods coming through... so if you're topping your plants you're cutting off those early flowers anyway...
    It's spring over here in Aus now so the growing season is underway here. I've got a ghost pepper plant that I topped about a week ago and It's honestly amazing how the plant has responded... all of the side nodes are suddenly jumping to life. I can't wait till it hits full maturity =P

  • @jenniferpocaigue2508
    @jenniferpocaigue2508 Год назад +2

    Very convenient timing of finding this video lol. I got a plant that's only a foot tall and has flowers (bought it as an established plant from store). Wasn't sure if I should chop or not lol. I KNOW it's supposed to be bigger

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  Год назад +1

      Yeah, for storebought plants we usually take off all the flowers/peppers and let the plants get established for a few weeks in its new location

  • @lesoneill4932
    @lesoneill4932 3 года назад +7

    Cheers mate really appreciate the vids Only my 2nd year of growing So find them really helpfully We do only have a short season here in London 🇬🇧

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching, glad you find us helpful!

    • @wordsbymaribeja1470
      @wordsbymaribeja1470 3 года назад +2

      I'm in London too, keep the flowers!

    • @michaelforrester816
      @michaelforrester816 3 года назад +2

      Got some superhots growing in Newcastle. Plants are 18 inches tall and strong with flower buds!! Ill be leaving them. They are loving this heat... finally

  • @RachelKDS
    @RachelKDS 3 года назад +3

    Super helpful, thank you!!! I'm glad I'm also in New England so I can kind of do exactly what you do 🤣

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад

      Yay! Happy to help with the peppers

    • @kellyclark7517
      @kellyclark7517 3 года назад +1

      I’m a New Englander but have transplanted to FL(no pun intended).so,I always dig knowing wat does wat in each zone🤙🏽

  • @joanies6778
    @joanies6778 3 года назад +11

    One year I grew a bonsai bell pepper. 😂 The bees enjoyed the blooms and the tiniest bell pepper won last in show before the whole thing went into the compost.

    • @dogslobbergardens6606
      @dogslobbergardens6606 3 года назад +1

      I've grown a few tiny pepper plants too, just for fun. You can either just keep them in a small container or take a bigger plant and trim it way back, then put it in a small container.

    • @1LindaJMacKay
      @1LindaJMacKay 3 года назад +1

      I overwinter my peppers...seems harsh to compost a cute little plant!

  • @user-ii4bj9jt4f
    @user-ii4bj9jt4f 15 дней назад

    So true. I live in Oklahoma and Minnesota with different grow times.

  • @dmitrimikrioukov5935
    @dmitrimikrioukov5935 Год назад +2

    I live in Siberia. The outdoor growing season here for peppers is usually nearly 3 months from June to August. However, in June and August the temperature may drop to nearly freezing at night. It may even freeze, but the latter is extremely rare.

    • @despoticmusic
      @despoticmusic Год назад

      That’s pretty harsh summer weather! I’ll never complain again about the British summer… 😂

  • @TheTruth_187
    @TheTruth_187 Год назад +1

    I let my Habanero plant do what it does and it rejected some of the flowers it'sself and grew 2 small yet beautifull habanero's (Indoors with very little sunlight buuut watering it with warm water i could hear the roots Slurp away the water straight up so beautifull to see and hear that.

  • @davidniemi6553
    @davidniemi6553 2 года назад +1

    :Love the hybridization chart on the white board in the background. I have one on my whiteboard at work keeping track of my Tabanero and Chisel hybrid generations (Chisel is one of those exceptions that produces early and often).
    A pepper with an amazingly slow growing cycle is Tabasco. It has quite small pods, but takes longer than a Ghost, so not good for a short growing season or a shady garden like mine; but once it finally gets rolling it can be very prolific.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  2 года назад

      Yep haha - we are actually growing Tabasco for the first time this year so I’m excited to see how it does in our climate and how the raw peppers taste

    • @davidniemi6553
      @davidniemi6553 2 года назад

      @@PepperGeek Tabascos are different from other species I've grown -- when ripe they come off the stem easily, are juicy and solid, not hollow, with small seeds, so you can just drop them into something you're cooking or at most cut them in half. They are hot green too, but 50K-100K scovilles when fully ripe (usually orange). They do not keep or ripen well indoors if picked, especially if off the stem, but at the end of the season I cut off whole branches and put them in a watering can or vase to ripen. Tabaneros have most of these characteristics too but are larger, sweeter, and don't take so long to grow and ripen.

  • @ciscokidable
    @ciscokidable 3 года назад +1

    Very good information thanks

  • @jaetee9570
    @jaetee9570 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for the awesome information!!

  • @freddieivory625
    @freddieivory625 3 года назад +1

    Great tips, thanks for sharing

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад

      You bet! Thanks for watching

  • @thecyclingcouple4438
    @thecyclingcouple4438 2 года назад

    i just did that to my bell peppers yesterday. they are now about 4-5 inches tall. I hope they will give me for fruits for the next 1-2 months.

  • @Mikey196601
    @Mikey196601 Год назад +2

    I’m growing peppers from packaged seeds my wife bought when she was in Bolivia , the plants at huge and lots of leaves and branches, there’s tons of flowers and have been like that for over month and there’s no change , in Bolivia they’re called locoto peppers

  • @vBDKv
    @vBDKv 3 года назад +1

    Awesome video, many thanks. Totally new at chili plants

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +1

      Glad you found it helpful - and hope you enjoy growing peppers this year!

  • @dogslobbergardens6606
    @dogslobbergardens6606 3 года назад +6

    Here's how I try to do it, counting backwards from when cold weather hits (nights under 55F): We get cold nights in end of Sept; count back 90 days for peppers that need 90 days to produce ripe fruit (more for some varieties); start letting flowers develop normally; count back 3-4 weeks, transplant into ground or final container, pick all flowers until then. So basically I remove all flowers until the middle of May or the first of June. It will vary with your climate region and type of peppers.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +3

      That's a great tip and super easy to remember!

    • @dogslobbergardens6606
      @dogslobbergardens6606 3 года назад +1

      @@PepperGeek thanks... it about takes longer to explain it than it does to do it. But it works. ;)

    • @Callie88Lilly
      @Callie88Lilly 3 года назад +1

      This is my first year growing peppers. I’m so thankful for this channel, and any advise!! I thought this post was great. Thanks for the tip!!

    • @dogslobbergardens6606
      @dogslobbergardens6606 3 года назад +1

      @@Callie88Lilly enjoy! Peppers are kind of addicting to grow because there's so many interesting different types. :)

  • @ftsbihg7735
    @ftsbihg7735 3 года назад +3

    I have always had bad results with my peppers. I will try this and see what happens.

  • @nunyabisnass1141
    @nunyabisnass1141 2 года назад

    I was thinking the same thing about when not to prune, because its been an abnormally cool late spring night temps in the 50's, and my habeneros are just starting to flower despite starting them back in march. My ghost pepers are still a few weeks away from producing their first flowers. So far we might get two days a week where the day temp is 80 and humid and the night 75, and we can see a significant amount of growth during that period. So hopefully we will have some good peppers by august with a month for them to ripen before it starts cooling down again. I might try to over winter some if the harvest is poor, but i dont think that will much of a problem, we'll just have to see.
    However i dont think the issue is a when, but a why. I see you're peppers generally only have a couple or a few flowers and flower buds per node. Mine have between five to nine. Since i dont expect the plant to be able to devote adequate energy to all of those flowers if fertilised successfully, then i will pick the what looks to be the weaker ones to reduce to cluster down to three per node. Otherwise you may expect to see an excess of flower drops that could falsely indicate a disease or other symptom of stress.

  • @irisking587
    @irisking587 3 года назад +1

    Super helpful thanks!!

  • @thishtns
    @thishtns 7 месяцев назад

    My plan for next year is to start an extra plant or two, dedicated to early producing, and 'retire' the early producer to the compost pile when the correctly topped and flower-plucked plants start hitting their stride. I know I don't have enough dried and frozen to last the whole time until then!

  • @Infiniti25
    @Infiniti25 3 года назад +2

    I started my seeds really late again this year, early May I believe, and will probably only receive around 10-20 immature fruit if I even get any flowers.
    I’ve potted them up from solo cup to their final 40cm pots and they’ve been outside a few days now in this UK mini-heatwave. Will see how I get on.
    Must...get...greenhouse...built!!!

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +1

      😂 A greenhouse would be a dream for us too! You could try constraining a few plants to smaller pots for earlier ripening of some pods, though you may end up with a smaller overall yield.

    • @Infiniti25
      @Infiniti25 3 года назад +1

      @@PepperGeek thanks for the tips. I only tried growing them from seed last year for the first time and again, I did it too late and got very small fruit.
      I’m confident about germinating and growing and potting them up based on your videos and others, I just need to make time next year to start them indoors in March instead of May.
      I have a 14x10 greenhouse but I don’t have the door, it was stolen the first night of disassembly. I therefore never had motivation to build it when I got it home...almost 3 years ago.

  • @bronwynthompson3403
    @bronwynthompson3403 3 года назад +2

    love the info

  • @ThatBritishHomestead
    @ThatBritishHomestead 3 года назад +1

    Very helpful thanks

  • @AraceaeFanatics
    @AraceaeFanatics 3 года назад +20

    I don't do this. After the first couple fruit they grow just fine. My pepper plants are all in 5 gallon buckets. Some are 3-4 feet tall.

  • @Zoeebella
    @Zoeebella 3 года назад +5

    Great video! I'm a new gardener and have about 16 pepper seedlings from mild bell peppers to super hot Scotch Bonnet. I'd love to see a video suggesting containers sizing and/ or raised beds. Some peppers will only get a foot tall and some 4-6 feet. What would be best for each variety.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +5

      Great idea - we will most likely do something like this. Quick version is that chinense varieties tend to be large, annuum smaller.

  • @bacarddi92
    @bacarddi92 3 года назад +10

    Could you make a guide on when to put the plants in to a larger pot. I am always running in to the problem on when to transplant my peppers in to larger containers in doors.
    Love the channel and website.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +5

      Coming very soon on the channel.

    • @My_Secret_ArtSketchbook
      @My_Secret_ArtSketchbook 2 года назад +1

      @@PepperGeek when??? I require help PLEASE

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  2 года назад

      @@My_Secret_ArtSketchbook ruclips.net/video/iMOIgEOUyw4/видео.html - all about the process

  • @matheya
    @matheya Год назад

    I had no idea ! I was so happy to see flowers and now I have to do this ? On the other hand the plants are small so I don't see how they would carry 10 peppers..

  • @sonshineandsong
    @sonshineandsong 3 года назад +1

    Well I guess next year I'll get better plants. I bought 2 very large bell peppers from the store and had to wait awhile for hubby to get the garden ready. They were about a foot tall and already had flowers and small peppers. Now I'm waiting for the peppers to mature but they are on the ground! Poor plant didn't grow taller! I came here looking for help. Next year I'll be sure to remove the flowers and I'm planning to pinch off the top too.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  2 года назад +1

      There is still time left in the season for the plant to grow more! But yeah early pruning buds/peppers can help

  • @sir.reelcinema
    @sir.reelcinema 2 года назад

    Full of amazing information. Thank you so much for sharing

  • @wedo4fun251
    @wedo4fun251 2 года назад +1

    Thank you

  • @cuddlebuddy88mc
    @cuddlebuddy88mc Месяц назад

    I got a new tabasco pepper plant. Adorable little thing was only 7 inches and had 3 flowers buds on it. I wanted to deadhead it anyway so it would grow bushy and not tall/leggy. My last TPP was too tall and the wind would knock it over [ potted plants, I have a balcony garden.]

  • @GabagoolFool
    @GabagoolFool 2 года назад +1

    I live in new york and i have been growing a ghost pepper indoors for one year. I picked early flowers for a month. No peppers from last summer to this summer indoors. As soon as i put the plant outside peppers started to pop everywhere.

  • @madisonarnahan3830
    @madisonarnahan3830 Год назад

    Thanks !

  • @kevinfinnegan8547
    @kevinfinnegan8547 2 года назад

    Great advice…

  • @sp00nesis
    @sp00nesis 3 года назад +10

    Wondering, say for instance in the case of your can pepper plant there, would that be an indicator it's time to upgrade it's container/pot? Like the roots are like "hey, yep we've given it all she's got" so the plant is like "well, on to the next step I guess..."?

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +6

      That is exactly right, yes. As I said in the video, as long as you transplant up at the right times, you shouldn’t have too many flowers to pluck!

  • @umafamiliaportuguesacomcer9195
    @umafamiliaportuguesacomcer9195 3 года назад +2

    Thanks,man

  • @MikeBova1
    @MikeBova1 2 года назад +1

    My trinidad moruga scorpion pepper plant was dropping its own flowers for weeks and weeks then once the plant hit about 4 feet high with a huge canopy BOOM 💥 within a week I has 20-30 and now there are more pods then I can count

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  2 года назад

      Nicee, hope you have a plan for all that heat 🔥

  • @moonshynegirl172
    @moonshynegirl172 3 года назад +2

    Lemon Drop is one of my favorites and it takes a very long time for fruit to mature.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад

      Right, some varieties take super long, one possible reason to leave flowers earlier in the season

    • @valkeakirahvi
      @valkeakirahvi 3 года назад +1

      It's my favourite too! Great taste and easy to grow in small space. I've even got produce in the middle of the dark winter under grow lights.

  • @bcc5701
    @bcc5701 Год назад +2

    Idk if you guys monitor comments this far back but I picked up a ghost pepper plant that was sitting in the discard/ clearance area at my Home Depot. It was by itself and I just figured why not - they gave it to me for a buck or so. It’s got tons of foliage but its short, the leaves are huge and I had to stake it since it was flopping around. It has a ton of tiny flower buds and one actual green ghost pepper growing. Im 6A/6B. Should I just let it do its thing? I transplanted it to a 12’ diameter pot from the little clear thing it was rot bound in

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  Год назад

      I would probably just let it do it’s thing. Ghosts are not huge so they won’t take up a ton of energy from the plant. With more soil space and some time, the plant should grow larger and keep producing until fall

  • @getzvalerevich6565
    @getzvalerevich6565 2 года назад +1

    Need the backstory to the "Can" situation.. Lol
    Love your vid's.. Cheers

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  2 года назад

      Basically a challenge started on the Pepper Lovers community on Facebook - grow a pepper from seed in a can over the winter and share your results. Cheers!

  • @Jardin-de-invierno
    @Jardin-de-invierno 3 года назад +1

    Love the video. Just found your channel. Love it. Much love from kc.

  • @BellMarika
    @BellMarika Год назад +1

    Thank you. And, does this apply to Bell peppers too?
    My new bell pepper plants have at least three buds right at the top of the plant. There are no side branches yet. The plants are about 15cm tall.

  • @Gabe511
    @Gabe511 Год назад +1

    My plants have been outside for about a month, and have been sprouting flowers recently. Some are bigger than others and feel like i should pick the early flowers on the small ones, but they have been out there long enough to let them grow so im not sure.

  • @kennethbland4086
    @kennethbland4086 Год назад

    Should you remove leaves at any time whilst growing? Thanks for great videos. Ken. UK.

  • @SuchaCaligrrl
    @SuchaCaligrrl 2 года назад +1

    My bell pepper plants are mature, about 20-30" tall, have an estimated amount of about 15 plants, all planted in grown, very full of beautiful dark green leaves, I don't see any insects or diseases and I check them everyday. They are growing strong and healthy but no bell peppers.... I don't know what I'm doing wrong or if I'm missing something, I'm lost and ready to just yank them out... frustrated.
    Also on some I cut them back (the tops) while they were still young... I read it somewhere, so I thought to try it on some and not others... just incase that method didn't work... but even those shorter ones (which are now just as tall are mature and haven't grown any peppers.

  • @Playingwith3D
    @Playingwith3D 2 года назад +2

    I shake the hell out of my peppers once a day when they start to bud, that way any buds that are sturdy enough to hang on are good enough to grow a good pepper.

  • @BossPresident
    @BossPresident 2 года назад

    thanks!

  • @eduardorutiaga9949
    @eduardorutiaga9949 3 года назад

    I planted some plants in pots outside , before fall i put them inside and they have been dropping some leaves but still growing. Would you recommend taking them outside once its warm again or just leave them inside?

  • @yooperlooper
    @yooperlooper 2 года назад

    I planted seeds from a red pepper I got at the grocery store. It's looks really healthy, about 8 inches tall with a strong stem but it only has about 4 or 5 large leaves and not full like yours. Should I have pinched it back at the beginning? I have several more started in small cups that are just coming up now. Thanks. . . . . Update: I just found your pruning video! I don't know if it's too late for my big pepper but I'm going to try it. Hope it works

  • @WonderlandGardens
    @WonderlandGardens 4 дня назад

    Deer eviscerated my peppers that were only maybe 4" at the time. This was a month and a half ago. They've regrown, but they're not quite as tall or healthy as the plant in this video, so I've been picking off all the little buds when they appear. There's currently one flower out of 20 pepper plants. It's mid-June 😨

  • @Fbarts
    @Fbarts 3 года назад +2

    Like the vids and am wondering what you consider a "long growing season"? I'm in Iowa and have about 5 months to grow most things. Thanks...

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +2

      So Iowa looks to be zone 5, so a bit shorter than where we are. Still plenty of time for peppers! Long seasons to me would be zone 8+ where you can start seeds and get plants outdoors earlier

  • @MyHighDesertGarden
    @MyHighDesertGarden 3 года назад +4

    i always pick early blossoms

  • @Daynja1
    @Daynja1 11 дней назад

    Alright I'm sold on picking the early flowers to encourage plant growth. But what about selectively picking some flowers on established plants? Does this help create larger peppers? What about towards the end of the season where a flower has little hope of creating a ripe pepper? I live in a cold climate and often end up with just a few small peppers per plant. I've been following a lot of your advice this year and so far things are going pretty good.

  • @ldzmn
    @ldzmn Год назад +1

    Oops... Wish I'd seen this vid before picking off flowers from my super hots here in the South UK 🙈. I'll stop now but really hope I get some rope pods 😢

  • @softaco3088
    @softaco3088 11 месяцев назад +1

    I always pick the flowers off until the plant is at least 2-3 feet tall. Some varieties that grow very bushy can be tough (Thinking thai or aji varieties at the top of my head ).

  • @GilaMonster971
    @GilaMonster971 2 года назад +1

    As you stated my growing season is short and I’m growing reaper peppers. So I never pick off flowers. My plants might not produce any peppers if I start picking off flowers.

  • @stevenduyck5204
    @stevenduyck5204 3 года назад +1

    I love your vid's! growing pepperplants in the city here and at work behind the window. Jalapeno, sportpepper, anaheim, aji dulce i also used some seeds from a pepper i boughed at the store, some King of the North paprika,... I now have them in 19cm (wide) pots, can i still transfer them to bigger grow bags? Does it affect it?

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад

      19cm is an acceptable size, though your yields will be less. It is a bit late to be transplanting in most climates, but you could certainly try!

  • @ericknight69
    @ericknight69 2 года назад +1

    It is all about the energy and when the energy is going to fruits it isn't going into the plant. But if your making crosses then the faster you can get that cross to take the faster you can get those seeds into the ground and sprouting.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  2 года назад

      Definitely true - good tip for the breeding community

  • @leandroikeda
    @leandroikeda 3 года назад

    The answer is yes.

  • @joeygirl314
    @joeygirl314 3 года назад +2

    @Pepper Geek - do you have a video on using that Aerogarden behind you to germinate peppers?!🙏🏼 I wasn’t successful this season at germinating peppers indoors (sadly, they started out great, then just when I was ready to “up-pot” them from the starter pods they seemed to just *POOF* - perish).😪 I recently purchased an AG to grow lettuces, which so far🤞🏼have been thriving - and was contemplating using it next Spring to germinate peppers with their “grow anything” pods...just curious! Thanks!!

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад +1

      Sorry to hear about your pepper plants dying...any idea what happened? As for the aerogarden, we will likely do a review-type video of the product. The plant in this video is our second full-sized grow in the unit, and it does a pretty good job! However, for germinating, we personally have more success in traditional starter mix in seed cells since we can better control temperature. Some of the seeds we tried to grow in the AG never sprouted, so 2 plants became 1. Still a great winter project and super fast growth!

  • @PolygonSwan
    @PolygonSwan 3 года назад +1

    Working for me in UK must have 1000 fruits setting! I removed 3 generations let it run on the fourth.

    • @PepperGeek
      @PepperGeek  3 года назад

      On one plant?! Tell us more!

  • @evalopez2700
    @evalopez2700 Год назад +1

    Question PLEASE??? 🙏When should you pick the flowers & when not to & on which plants?? 🤷‍♀️ I heard some plants are done with their life cycle once they flower, but you can pick the flower heads to keep them producing longer. Or to help young plants grow bigger, such as with tomato, cucumber & pepper plants. So I picked all the first flowers of my young bean plants... but then saw a vid saying to pick excess foliage to spur more flowers to grow.
    I'm so confused. 😒

  • @vanessamorey3812
    @vanessamorey3812 10 месяцев назад +1

    Cool info, thank you sir!