Me watching this after I pruned my peppers watching your pruning peppers video ..
@Princyres937 ай бұрын
Same 😂
@kaybrarian7 ай бұрын
Same.
@matthewmccrillis47627 ай бұрын
Same. 😢
@wedfrest7 ай бұрын
Same
@willrustad92177 ай бұрын
Yup
@markb89547 ай бұрын
I worked on a farm in Pennsylvania where we grew acres of potatoes & Bell Peppers. As you can imagine, these plants were never fussed over & definitely never pruned. We harvested tons of peppers & shipped them off in crates to large produce suppliers in Philadelphia & Baltimore. Provide space, fertilize new transplants & keep them watered.
@xaviercruz47637 ай бұрын
What was the yield per plant per 2 week period? How much was it sold for a pound?
@TheAnnoyingBoss7 ай бұрын
Tell me about what you learned when it came to the bell papper farming becausenid like to get into jolepenos for hot sauce because of my geographical location
@chompers117 ай бұрын
What npk ratios do you run throughout the season
@alexwatts62707 ай бұрын
Lol strange no response
@egujuga7 ай бұрын
@@alexwatts6270 because they are asking for essay and people HAVE LIVES its been one day a you have to manually turn on notifications for replies to comments and NOBODY has to respond to ANYTHING ANYONE says
@Giggiyygoo7 ай бұрын
Whenever there's a controversy about whether or not to do something, I always pick the one that's easiest.
@L_MD_7 ай бұрын
😂
@Zaque-TV6 ай бұрын
Giggity!!
@Scoondog4 ай бұрын
I believe are coping what marijuana growers do because normally they grow indoor plants and topping them gives shorter bushier plant and and the bottom limbs are closer to the lights without burning the tops. This is just my opinion
@darealrulezbreaker94933 ай бұрын
@@Scoondog ohh when using grow lights that could actually be a really good reason, good idea
@cynthiamartinez58847 ай бұрын
After doing my research on this topic, the trend I notice is most people advocating topping peppers usually live where their pepper season is long and hot. My pepper season is 6-7 months and they grow like crazy in my heat. I considered starting to top them at the end last season when my potted pepper plants that were as tall as me kept falling over every time we had a storm in September and October (after a summer with little rain.) When I planted last month, I planted a topped and untopped pepper plant of a few different varieties side-by-side for comparison. The untopped ones quickly grew about a foot tall. We are now in tornado season so we get extremely high wind regularly. The untopped peppers couldn't withstand the winds without staking. The topped ones took the winds with no problems. All my other pepper plants that are not included in this experiment got tops got pruned off for that reason alone.
@Psyche7217 ай бұрын
I live in toronto. I topped mine because they were already too tall for my greenhouse, so by topping them I was able to keep them in the greenhouse like a month longer
@cynthiamartinez58847 ай бұрын
@@Psyche721 I guess I should have qualified my observation as people who topped their pepper plants specifically for better growth habits for the rest of the season, most of them are from hot climates. Your situation is different since it has more to do with managing size in a limited temporary space. I'm curious. If you had started your peppers later that they didn't get too tall, would you still have pruned the top of them?
@ovidiufarcau2437 ай бұрын
HY there in my experiments topping just the two leaves not a whole segment produces the effect of pushing the plant to bush so you just cut the two top leaves and their stems no stalk. it works ! zone 7a
@CesarTreetops3 ай бұрын
Sounds reasonable. I'll also experiment with this since I live in a tropical area where we can grow peppers all year (zone 12b-ish) so I'm expecting to see a considerable difference (maybe?)
@rocky64287 ай бұрын
I needed this 2 weeks ago....😂😂😂
@cowboyblacksmith7 ай бұрын
It’s worth trying yourself to see, nothing wrong with that.
@Psyche7217 ай бұрын
@@cowboyblacksmith I did it because they were hitting the grow lights in my greenhouse but there was still weeks ago before i can plant outside, so I still think of it as a good idea
@MJerryTV7 ай бұрын
ME TOO!!! I pruned all of mine now following their last video on how to 🤣
@judifarrington94617 ай бұрын
@@MJerryTV They will grow back. Last year the deer ate mine way down 3 times and they bounced right back.
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
Don't fret! Definitely not the worst thing to try pruning. We've just changed our ways in the last few years.
@zacwebb57387 ай бұрын
I only prune plants I plan to overwinter. I found most pruned plants start more main stems that I leave on the plant til next season. It has many more places to start new growth as opposed to the “Y” shape of unpruned plants. I end up with tall AND bushy specimens with way more blooms.
@skillosoph7 ай бұрын
Interesting, thanks!
@donhorak94177 ай бұрын
Severely prune for over-wintering. Spring regrowth is amazing!
@debrakrause75707 ай бұрын
Do you do anything to the plant in the spring, summer when you put it back out into the garden. I'm in zone 6. I overwintered 1 plant just to try it.
@Rabellaka.7 ай бұрын
@@debrakrause7570I overwinter too. I try to keep the flowers off until they go outside, but that’s it.
@imarchello5 ай бұрын
Only if it's an outdoors plant. If it's a potted indoor plant, then don't.
@sstimac7 ай бұрын
I remember a number of years ago everyone started talking about pruning peppers and I saw your video where you talked about pruning them. I did it for two seasons and noticed no difference at all. They weren't more durable, they weren't sturdier, they didn't produce more, but they did take more work. So, I stopped doing it years ago. It's a waste of time.
@MarathonManPeatMoss7 ай бұрын
I never prune new plants. As far as over-wintering: I've done severe cut backs as you showed with limited success, half the time the plants died. Last fall I brought in a few full plants - bhut jolokia and habanero - that still had peppers growing on them and they did great in a bay window that gets all the morning sun. I had peppers for several months and then they just continued to grow and by April I had new peppers growing on them. I just moved them outside and they are doing well.
@nancyk81537 ай бұрын
I live in zone 9B, I don’t prune my bell peppers but I do prune my other peppers just to maintain a bushier plant. Our growing season end around Thanksgiving time. We have plenty of time to harvest.
@jonestraloma7 ай бұрын
I’m in a 9b too. Do you done cover crop during/after harvest?
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
I think I would have to try pruning again if we ever moved to a warmer climate. Definitely changes things with a longer season.
@jeffsquires66207 ай бұрын
I live in northern Canada. Started germination in last week January. My reaper's and chillies just started producing flowers. My 4th year here and still a learning experience. I have to babysit them daily but my friends appreciate the peppers jam I send them every Christmas.
@smas32567 ай бұрын
Grow Bigger Peppers (7 tips). We'll be watching again. We had an awesome harvest last season. Thank you so much.
@Jyvilla.7 ай бұрын
I just pruned my pepper plants a day ago after I watched your pruning pepper video dated 4 years ago. 😢
@aries_xf7 ай бұрын
This is my first ever season gardening & growing peppers. I've definitely made a few mistakes already, but my sprouts are looking great! Love all of the information available in your videos, it's been endlessly helpful. Based on all the info you've given, I don't think I'll prune/top-off any of the peppers I'm trying to grow; but I realized I should definitely invest in some stakes or cages for later!
@noora77737 ай бұрын
And if you are going to get cages, do put them in place before the plant grows big, because it's easier that way...And why not with stakes too, because if you try to stick the stake close to the plant later on, you could snap more roots than what you would when the plant is still small. And there's wind the supports are important already when planting outside, I think...
@gigiartstudiowithartistvir39197 ай бұрын
The same can be said for tomatoes. Don't pinch out the suckers! You will get a better yield if you let your maters to what they do. I think it holds true for watermelons too. Some people trim the vines but I don't and last year I had 20 watermelons get nice and big from one plant, which is a lot.
@WS-by5cl7 ай бұрын
I would personally say this with a grain of salt; I live in a humid area and pruning tomato suckers is essential if I want my plants to stay healthy into late summer.
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
Hard to agree fully here, as tomatoes can get pretty unruly and wild. I do think this is true for cherry and grape varieties, but for larger indeterminates we like to prune suckers and keep 1-2 main stems
@gigiartstudiowithartistvir39197 ай бұрын
@@PepperGeek I'm in a much drier climate so not much humidity thank goodness! I am also fortunate to have several acres to garden so letting my tomatoes no matter what variety sprawl is doable. It all goes to show there are multiple ways to approach food growing! :) Happy gardening!
@Cyber_Kriss7 ай бұрын
I'm growing my pepper plants under a LED fixture before putting them outdoor. My problem is that they grow bushy and small like the case you say at 04:23. This particular plant is a chocolate habanero. It made small leaves and a lot of branches despite its small size (the plant has roughly 2 months right now). Do you know why my led is keeping all my plants short ? Any help will be appreciated.
@The83471357 ай бұрын
1:57 yes, I literally did it yesterday. How did you know?
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
Hah! No biggie, the plants will bounce back
@davidniemi65537 ай бұрын
I experimented with pruning a few years ago. I did not see decisive advantages or disadvantages on the whole, but I'd also point out that some peppers are naturally very low and bushy early on (many c. chinense varieties) while others are naturally tall (most c. baccatum). This is just their natural growth patterns regardless of light conditions, and it doesn't help to try to modify it. It WOULD make sense to top-prune if you bought a weak and leggy for its type from store and want to fix it. Looking forward to the next pruning experiment!
@smas32567 ай бұрын
I'm in zone 6b. Thank you. Since watching your videos on peppers we are also planting peppers other than Bells this season and stopped pruning. Our plants are so full and have lots of peppers, we bought tomato cages for our peppers the year. Question. Have you done a video of planting a heavily pruned pepper back outside in the spring? We'll be watching again your video on how to prune before taking indoors for winter.
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
That is great! We have not exactly done a video on that topic, but maybe we can. We have an overwintered Hawaiian chili pepper plant that we will be moving back outside soon. Thanks for watching!
@jeffengland18627 ай бұрын
I never prune any of my pepper plants. I use heavy mushroom compost in every roll and steak them like a tomato plant. I give them tons and tons of water. Lots of peppers every year!!
@TM-ro7lh7 ай бұрын
Curtis, have you guys ever cut the bottom part of your stems, added rooting hormone and buried the lower stem? In cannabis they call it logging. You end up with 4x the roots. Plants grow larger and throw off more fruit.
@dlwn647 ай бұрын
Agreed! I've been growing peppers for 10 years and I did it once, just didn't seem like it made much of a difference. I usually get large yields without pruning so I don't see the reason.
@marcinherczynski32617 ай бұрын
Hi. 4:50 - what variety of pepper is this?
@racebiketuner7 ай бұрын
There's a huge problem with fungal diseases in my area. To combat this, I remove leaves 6-8 inches above soil as the plant grows. Also remove interior branches to improve airflow. All removal is done very gradually. I typically wait for two to five new leaves to appear before removing one leaf from the bottom/interior. In my experience, removing more has a bad effect on growth, especially in the first several weeks.
@tomfisher31176 ай бұрын
Hi, thanks for a well done video. This year is the first year that I have not topped my pepper plants. I did remove the bottom 4-6 inches of leaves and my plants are definitely taller this year but they are also relatively bushy. You have confirmed that this strategy is the correct one for me in my garden. Thank you!
@mcgritty88425 ай бұрын
I appreciate this, as I’m a new gardener and learning as I go ❤
@trappenweisseguy273 ай бұрын
Yes, I make sure to “lollipop” my plants and keep all the vegetation off the lower 6 inches. Mcgritty8842, if there’s no way for the sun to get through to those leaves they aren’t going to do anything other than maybe help the plant keep cool through respiration if you’re in a very hot climate. Even then sunblocking fabric is a better choice. Buy a cheap moisture meter so you’re not overwatering, which can lead to root rot. If growing in pots your plants will likely become root bound at some point. If the meter gets hard to push into the plant it is likely root bound and will be dependent on you giving plant food for it to function well.
@trappenweisseguy273 ай бұрын
If the meter gets hard to push into the soil I meant.
@YoKnow7 ай бұрын
I just pruned one of my plants! My plant bushed out like crazy in four days. I have 8 new branches on the plant now on the first prune. I don't plan on pruning it anymore. I think the first prune is somewhat necessary, but after that no.
@robertotoledo81154 ай бұрын
Thanks! First time grower here and I never topped my plants. Not because I didn't want to, I just didn't think about it. My plants are so tall now and very bushy. And yes, I dont seem to have problems with pests. I've been harvesting my peppers these last two weeks and none of the peppers have show any signs of pests. My plants are Scotch Bonnet and Thai Pepper. I did prune leaves that looked unhealthy. I also had to use support rods. I'm hoping to grow some more peppers, Manzano, Jalapeno, Habanero and Poblano and will not prune them.
@matttowner31797 ай бұрын
I just topped mine yesterday, like you said 🤪😆
@JeanneKinland7 ай бұрын
I'm doing that same experiment this year. Some are pruned and some are not. Thanks for the information.
@MONSTRmanM7 ай бұрын
I have those exact shells how do you put them together😅
@DennisD-yv4ys7 ай бұрын
Any insight into strategic pruning Over Wintered peppers? It seems they want to grow flowers already...the idea is maybe a few snips help force it Into veg mode?
@agac48297 ай бұрын
I"ve pruned my chilli pepperoncini and it has a strange shape now = main stem is growing streigh up, it has produced only one branch which is growing horizontally.
@MSDK_DARKDRAGON4 ай бұрын
5:45 what is that purple beautifully thing on the left?
@ndbg468817 ай бұрын
Here's a question for you - I'm in southern Maryland (7B). I need to leave my garden in early August returning in late September. Can you suggest how to prune my peppers so they regrow and set fall peppers? link to video would be great. Thank you!
@i1bike7 ай бұрын
Hi from europe. If i leave my peppers in summer on temperature 28-32 C° for only 4 days, they are gone. They need water every day, they wilt every day. Peppers cant stand heat like tomatoes can
@awsomedude123456787 ай бұрын
Last yr we had a very hot and dry spring all of our local produce farms reported dramatic increases in pepper production If Pruning is increasing ypur production pls consider changing your hardening off process chances are you are not getting enough light for your plants and they are too tall
@SpotBentley7 ай бұрын
What about snipping off flower blossoms early in the season before the plant is bushy?
@carter_17 ай бұрын
That's the "problem" I have. Tons of buds on pepper plants.. that may or may not be too small. I heard once that the early buds will stunt plant growth. But now there's so much controversy, I wish I'd never heard any of it, because I don't know what actually to do. I'm in between zone 6-7 too, so shorter growing season (especially if I mess up my plants). My 77 year old mom is like "I guess I never paid attention" 🤔
@MichaelDBauer7 ай бұрын
I agree with your reasoning. It makes sense. Unfortunately, along with the plants we have outside which are fine, we are also growing cayenne and jalapeno in our Aerogarden Farm 24plus. The plants tend to get too high since there is only 24 inches before it hits the lights.
@fivenight7 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience. Most of the topping videos are shorts and reels lol.
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
I've seen a lot of that lately, hard to cover the topic adequately in 30 seconds!
@Dom10Sage57 ай бұрын
Our overwintered peppers get a hefty trim before going into "dormancy", however, some only get a slight trim and actually produce indoors, albeit slow going. Come spring, when they all go outside again, the ones with a light trim do far better than the ones that got a "standard" trim. Granted, that's a bit different situation than topping seedlings, but I have noticed a much better yield on lightly trimmed, overwintered peppers. Also, I do understand that pepper plants will typically produce better in their 2nd year. However, in my experience it works well into several years.(we have a 5 year old carolina reaper "tree" that produces very heavy after a good trim in late winter/early spring, before going outside. As a general rule, we do not prune our pepper plants except for the very lowest leaves.
@15RunAway7 ай бұрын
Arrived at the exact same position and same points earlier this season myself.. 🔥🔥
@Plasmacid20977 ай бұрын
What about picking early flowers/buds? Is this still worth doing? Mine have a couple coming in right now, wondering if i should prune them to get more growth or leave the plant be.
@tyler61477 ай бұрын
On a related note, a question: Are some varieties of peppers naturally more short and bushy vs tall and lanky? If so, knowing that about a specific plant might influence a decision to prune or not.
@zacwebb57387 ай бұрын
Small chili fruit plants are usually bushier imo. Plants of the Anuum variety are safer to prune if you worry about setting the growth back because they tend to grow faster. (90-100 days).
@Squeakachu10067 ай бұрын
I’ve never topped plants on purpose. However, the stems to several of my plants snapped on accident so I’m using them as an experiment to see what happens. They got damaged late in the game, they were already pretty big so I’m unsure how it’s going to go. Fingers crossed!
@WS-by5cl7 ай бұрын
I dropped one of mine while potting up, and accidentally snapped the stem below the leaves … I carefully bandaged it back together and you can’t even tell! I’ve done this with tomatoes too :)
@PreatorRaszagal7 ай бұрын
Did you get the same harvest because the topped one produced more later and the non topped earlier but fewer at a time, or was it the same amount at "all time"? I don't prune my plants at the top (mostly because shorter season), but I do remove leaves at the bottom whenever i potting up or if they grow tiny bushes at the bottom. Will be interesting to see the outcome of your Jalapeño experiment!
@PrudentReviews7 ай бұрын
Great video!
@coreybenoit32105 ай бұрын
I made the mistake a couple of years ago and pruned my bells, they did horrible after that. Since then I don't prune them anymore and they do great every year.
@nospamhere7 ай бұрын
Need similar video on leave pruning and side shoot pruning. Some of my smaller varieties are becoming so full of side shoots that I worry for airflow. And also, I am used to tomato pruning so I want to get rid of all those suckers :D Its my first year growing peppers, sorry if that is self explanatory :D
@benitoriverajr52887 ай бұрын
Do you know anything about the Tibetan lhasa chile? It’s hard to find info
@decisivedigitalcreations7 ай бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏 Great Video on Pruning!
@mosey58787 ай бұрын
i am glad i see this i wont prune my pepperplants. do i need to do that with tomato and cucumbers?
@johnjude26857 ай бұрын
I didn't like pruning top area but the bottom foliage touching soil yes I do. Any yellowish foliage yes I've never tried but pruning with the coming of frost date as tomatoes should work for peppers also.that late season pruning of tomatoes does give the biggest tomatoes of the season I definitely have best seedlings this 4th season for my growlight and after learning from the Pepper Geek (s). Thanks you both
@andreanaabigail23527 ай бұрын
Do you prune off early flowers to prevent fruiting on a young small plant?
@mcquaimc7 ай бұрын
Hi I felt I had to prune my peppers because they were starting to produce flowers and it was still 4 weeks before transplanting to the garden. I would have been pinching off blooms incessantly and felt they had enough time to recover; thankfully they are bouncing back. Maybe I started them too early? .What would you have done? Thank you.
@gardeningtroutmaster7 ай бұрын
excellent. i accidentally topped one but all my pepper plants bush out naturally, zone 4b I have to keep them in my greenhouse.. and baby them
@ValerieT20237 ай бұрын
I used to try topping off my peppers. Wasn't sure if it worked or not, so i stopped. I did have one hot banana pepper plant that exploded with growth & peppers. But again, did topping off create that or would it have happened anyway?
@chrissambol7 ай бұрын
Hey guys! Could you talk about the Pale Green Assassin Bug? I have one on my Jalapeno plant and it is putting in some work for me! Thanks!!
@DynamicTwizzy7 ай бұрын
Hi, I think this is the latest video so I decided to ask this question here. Last week I planted some cayenne peppers and they have sprouted! I estimate 100% germination rate actually!!! They are slowly starting to grow their true leaves, but most of them only seem to have one. Is this normal? They are also really tiny!
@kerrycoyle89307 ай бұрын
I tried pruning my pepper plants for a few years and really didn't notice any difference so I don't anymore... I spend enough time in my garden already doing many other things. I do wish I could totally eliminate ALL weeding - I don't think it's much fun at all :-)
@johnbrzenksforearm82957 ай бұрын
Good to know. I'll just let mine grow this year.
@nitelite787 ай бұрын
I grow all my plants on windowsills. My plants are already (in late May) reaching the top of the windowsill which means the top of the plants will get no light. So I'm thinking topping and starting a couple of weeks earlier is a good idea so plants get light on the windowsill for a lot longer. In the past couple of years I've had to top the plants late in the season a when they run out of room. So maybe there are some circumstances where it makes sense for certain taller varieties. Annums seem to have this problem the most whilst slower growing Chinense don't reach the top of the windowsill.
@compucomics7 ай бұрын
Southern california has been having a pretty cold year so far, and I've been having issues with mildew, essentially defoliating my peppers in my greenhouse Ive used neem oil, but im sort of just set on having bushy peppers this year. My second year of growing and my first year i had zero issues other than small peppers, but on my second, im off to a rough start.
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
Cold temps are tough for peppers, they like it very warm. Try to increase airflow if you can, and be sure not to use an over-concentrated solution of neem oil. If it is too heavy, the neem can actually cause the foliage to burn and die.
@xaviercruz47637 ай бұрын
Peppergeek do you think pruning based on your results would seem to work well if the peppers produce all year in a warm-hot zone frost free?
@dragongyld29677 ай бұрын
How do I get rid of fungal gnat larvae in my plants?
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
Mosquito bits can help, yellow sticky traps, and usually only a major concern for indoor plants
@dragongyld29677 ай бұрын
@PepperGeek my peppers are still currently indoors, hence the need to try and get rid of them. Also i read that diluting hydrogen peroxide can work. Is that true? Also, I read top dressing with some cinnamon can help as well. Does that help as well?
@Chattyman27 ай бұрын
Here in the UK we just don't have the season for the plants to catch up after a prune
@santaanaroadwildman36147 ай бұрын
Good experiment!
@glow18157 ай бұрын
I never purne any of my plants. And yes it thrives loaded of fruits every year. The only time I take off the leaves is when its bruned or dead.
@charlenekeach82507 ай бұрын
I am just starting to grow peppers; your info has been very helpful! Right now I am hardening my seedlings to prepare them for transplanting in a raised bed. I love your informative site. THANK YOU!
@cowboyblacksmith7 ай бұрын
Good luck, I finally got mine hardened off and outside in their 5 gallon grow bags. First time I hardened them off I went from indoors only to full blazing sun for about an hour and they got bleached on some of the leaves (came back fine though). A cloudy day works great and then sun here and there.
@7656midbakd-wr5qk7 ай бұрын
@peppergeek what do you run your light at PPFD for bellpeppers? 350-450?
@tixien7 ай бұрын
Hello Sir. In my little corner of southwestern France - which usually enjoys a nice mild-to-warm oceanic climate -, this year’s quite messy weather pattern forces me to a dilemma: half of my pepper plants are already flowering and forming fruits although still very young (like 25-30cm high…). I’m not a huge fan of pruning pepper plants but I’m worrying this early flowering/fructification might divert too many resources to it instead of growing and strengthening. Would you be kind enough to share your take on this specific situation and let me know whether you’d prune or not? Cheers😉
@Toader_6667 ай бұрын
I need more videos😂 I love watching you guys
@reefslug7 ай бұрын
What is your favorite granular fertilizer right now?
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
For potted plants, we usually just use Miracle gro organics or fox farm. However, Miracle gro organics does have a slightly annoying tendency to clump together when not stored in a very dry location. Espoma garden tone is good, but it needs time to break down to feed the plants, so always be proactive with slow-release organics.
@phillippinter75187 ай бұрын
This is different but people sometimes top broad bean plants to make them mature faster, it may not increase or possibly decrease yield but can be a necessary thing if your relay cropping
@Lukiel6667 ай бұрын
I put a fan on my indoor seedlings to encourage stronger stems before moving them outside.
@mosey58787 ай бұрын
me to. i hope they will grow strong
@crithappened7 ай бұрын
Vit b and ph lvls below 7 also helps
@mosey58787 ай бұрын
@@crithappened how to use vit b.and how you maintain ph lvls?
@crithappened7 ай бұрын
@@mosey5878 i have a cheap ph meter in the soil, (it cost me like 5 bucks (15 pln)) i do this to get a clue on what's going on in the soil. Most fertilizers increase the pH over time and so does regular water. Adding a bit of blueberry fertilizer along side of the regular fertilizer is the way to go in my experience. You can also squeeze a bit of lemon juice or vit c powder in the water before watering. For this i highly recommend getting a pH meter so you can measure the right amount of lemon juice or vit c powder. Cba to find the studies conducted on plants and vit c. But i remember 50% growth increase. This is due to several effects but I didnt get paid for a lecture 🤣😂
@crithappened7 ай бұрын
@@mosey5878 vit b for plants is not that expensive and you dont need too much of it
@burtmacklin64437 ай бұрын
I prune leaves that come in contact with the soil, yellowed or damaged leaves, flowers while I am trying to get the plants to grow more, and prune them way back before I bring them inside for the winter. Edit: I do NOT top my peppers.
@dmick91687 ай бұрын
I am going to continue to advocate for topping. There's just no comparison side by side when you see how much they bush out. I have had poor results with larger peppers so I do agree with those types its not best to top.
@BustinRootz7 ай бұрын
I actually prune just one of my plans to see what it was going to do. I say I’m 50-50 on the issue, but I will not be pruning anymore. I’m just gonna let them grow.
@danielpedigo727 ай бұрын
I can comfirm they grow bushy naturally. My jalapeño & ceyanne plants have very thick/woody bases & have bushed out very well. I never pruned them aside from removing damaged leaves or pest infested leaves when treated the infestation.
@ovidiufarcau2437 ай бұрын
what about the Asian technique to graft second plant to a first one so that more nutrients come to it - ending up with one plant with 2 roots systems ? they claim that the yield is much more than 2 normal plants combined.
@maurizzla7 ай бұрын
What about the early flowers? They start to grow now, but the plants are not very big, i would like to grow them more than producing early fruits. I saw a video where they cut them off i early stages. How do you handle this?
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
We remove early flowers to a certain point. Usually stop picking the flowers about 2 weeks after transplanting to the plant's final location
@maurizzla7 ай бұрын
@@PepperGeek Thank you!
@diedrehood99617 ай бұрын
Great information. Thank you for sharing 💚💚💚😁
@Paul_seekingthetruth4U7 ай бұрын
I grew all kinds of hot peppers and they were too hot to eat them all or even use them all for hot sauce. Now I only grow sweet varieties of peppers and I can eat them all.
@PepperGeek7 ай бұрын
Don't worry if you've already pruned, like I said, we used to prune most of our plants and they grew into healthy productive plants. It's just not something we bother with anymore.
@CarlosLauterbach7 ай бұрын
You can just cut off some of the flowers. Same effect as pruning without sacrificing leaves. So it wont delay your harvest as much. Also the less flowers means less fruits which leads to more energy for the remaining fruits and new leaves
@johnny310xx7 ай бұрын
Great chanel man !!{ thanks for all the infos 🤙🤙🤙 🌶️ 🔥 🌱
@Kusumavijaya7 ай бұрын
Capsicum annum tend to grow like inverted pyramid when not pruned, and that look very neat naturally. But when it is prunned it branch out too much and way too bushy
@121080hulk6 ай бұрын
I cut some of mine, the top new growth was funky
@jondal7 ай бұрын
I never prune my habaneros, they form a nice bush on their own, with a crown of leaves like a solar panel protecting the richness of beautiful peppers underneath
@ericduncan21917 ай бұрын
I agree, there is no reason to prune your plants. I will say if you want to start early and train your plants you can really max your yields per plant. I live in really long growing season being in 8a, so I don't bother with it, but if I lived zone 4-5 then I would for sure do it. I've grown peppers under grow lights in the winter in 5 gallon fabric pots, to transplant in the spring and the harvests from such a pampered plant are just insane. I tell you ur neighbors always come looking when you have 8ft tall pepper plants.
@msponge682816 сағат бұрын
I have a long growing season, about 9 months of solid outdoor growth (more if started earlier indoors), and I will always top certain varieties, but not others. plants with lots and lots of small sized peppers I will top, but varieties with larger peppers I will not. I have done side by side comparisons , and do think there is some benefit to topping some varieties that are naturally bushy and have lots of fruit that grow and ripen fast (pequins, birdseye, pearl etc) everything else I will underprune, but not top. This is only if you live in a place where you have a long growing season, and can get many upon meany fruit flushes through the entire year.
@connieyaskowski59917 ай бұрын
Peppers don’t get aggressively growing until the nights are consistently over 65 degrees and days in the 80’s. Pruning causes too much of a set back in fruit production in my growing zone of 6b. I did it once but never again.
@jimrobinson74417 ай бұрын
I got free Datil seed from Baker Creek this year so I started one, it was growing really tall & slender so I topped it. It's beautiful now and about 2 feet tall, still pretty slim even after branching out, but mainly I'm noticing some of the tiniest little buds I've ever seen on a pepper, I'm talking half the size of a coriander seed, none have opened to a blossom yet, granted I'm used to bell peppers and Cubanelles, I've never grown a hot pepper before. I'm wondering if the smallness has to do with this particular variety of pepper or if it's because I topped it? Or is it just because it's still very early season in zone 5b and I should be pinching them off? Have you (or anyone) ever grown a Datil or some other pepper with really tiny buds? Is this normal?
@WS-by5cl7 ай бұрын
Following. My peppers were putting on tiny buds too, while still indoors. Some of the varieties it happened on were new to me. I kept pinching the buds off, bc it was nowhere near planting time. Now that the plants are outside I will see what they do!
@drewjorde7 ай бұрын
So should I not pick the early flowers that are starting to grow? They are just barely starting and I’ve been on the fence of doing it or not because I know it’s still early
@timothkeyyprice7 ай бұрын
You did not mention simply pinching the top bud to cause branching. No loss this way.
@wizpig647 ай бұрын
my greek pepperoncini pepper seedlings couldnt handle the weather like the rest of the peppers, so their tops got pruned by me after they drooped over too much. call it natural selection!
@RolloTonéBrownTown7 ай бұрын
I don't believe any gardening advice right away, if I hear a logical idea, I will test it. To this end, after I saw a prune video last fall, I pruned one pepper plant and left another 2 alone. The prune job I did was a "winterising" prune that removed a good percentage of the foliage. Maybe 60%. Both plants did their normal dormant thing and began perking up this spring. The one I pruned began rapidly putting out leaves but they are still on the smaller side. Like this video shows, the "nodes" were indeed where the new growth emerged and it now has two large fruits ripening on it. The 2 unpruned began putting out fresh leaves and the older leaves drooped, and popped right off when I applied the most gentle pull on them. These two now have at least eight fruits apiece and growing vigorously! Important to note I am well above Canada in terms of latitude which has radical effects on daylight and growing seasons so ymmv
@BiletherBaganBari7 ай бұрын
Great job 👍
@trfisher787 ай бұрын
Do you pick off early blooms?
@PepperGeek6 ай бұрын
Usually yes, and especially early peppers. Up until the plants are established outside
@kevinaldcroft28457 ай бұрын
I prune all of the dead foliage off my pepper plants. I also spray my peppers for fungi and aphids. I have noticed a white fungal growth that seems to come with the aphids. This usually kills the branches and stem of the plant. So far, I have a little yellowing on the leaves (birds eye chili) but I have not lost any of the plants as yet. This is my third/ fourth years with some of these plants. I dehydrate the chili and grind it down into a fine flake or powder. Only for the brave.🤣😂
@WS-by5cl7 ай бұрын
What spray do you use?
@kevinaldcroft28457 ай бұрын
@@WS-by5cl I use a bug and fungus spray (Yellow 1 liter plastic spray bottle). We shop at Bunnings hardware (Queensland, Australia) the product is a brand called "Brunnings" (Brunnings with the "r" not a typo). I think it is a general garden brand (not exclusive to Bunnings hardware) because I have seen the same brand in other stores/ discount chains etc. I spray the stems and branches every two weeks making sure I go all the way around the whole stem back and front and the branches. It seems to keep the fungus and aphids under control. However, you do need to keep it up or it will kill the whole plant. If you are expecting any rain, then spray after the rain has finished. I have found the stems will darken in colour as the fungus dies off, but it will return quickly if you don't keep up with the spraying regime. I hope this helps cheers.
@eriklarson98757 ай бұрын
I have a two stem jalapeno and I pruned one side, my own experiment!
@christopher73987 ай бұрын
Basically don’t prune unless you live in zone 8 or above? I’ve never pruned since I barely get enough of a growing season as it is, especially on bell and poblanos, and I’m up north.
@janijaakola31797 ай бұрын
grow lights and plant at begining of december u got plenty of time to grow