4 Tips For a Huge PEPPER Harvest

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In this video I'm going to go through my top 4 tips to get a huge pepper harvest. Organic gardening doesn't have to be difficult. I want to make it very easy for you to learn how to grow peppers with great success by giving you easy to follow garden tips.

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I put dark rocks around my plants. They absorb heat during the day and give it off at night. The peppers love it.

margaretarmstrong
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Grow in pairs; add phosphorus to hole when planting— bone meal, rock phosphate; prune: the growth hormone is in the tip / pinch or clip above first six leaves right above a leaf node; pinch off the flowers for two weeks; pick first 6 fruits. Goal of all is to stimulate fruit growth.

MFV
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Perfectly planned, prepped, produced and presented pepper pvideo! Thank you.

LiftRanger
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Thank you SOOOO much for putting celcius temperature on the screen. Very much appreciated.
From Australia 😊

leannecahill
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I had 2 potted bell pepper plants. A deer chomped on one of them taking it down from about 14 inches to 5. It ended up producing way more peppers.

autumn
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I thought the weather had finally turned and planted my peppers 2 days ago. It's now 54 at night. Hoping for the best.

GardenKatt
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I started topping my peppers when i saw your video from last year and the results were amazing. More peppers than i could have imagined and easier to care for the plant. In addition, I also overwintered my jalapenos based on your video and I have flowers and peppers dripping from the plants before the other seedlings have had a chance to mature. thanks for the great advice

richardcain
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I not only liked this video, I bookmarked it because next season I'll be all like "what did he say?" Thanks!!

bellofthedesert
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My mom has taken care of my parents' garden every year but, due to her health, I planted and will be taking care of their garden for them. This is my first ever garden and, knock on vegetables, everything is growing remarkably well so far (mostly thanks to this channel and some of another). I never knew there was so much to learn about gardening in general, as well as each individual plant. It was a bit daunting after a couple weeks and I began regretting undertaking this project. Thankfully, my competitive nature took over because my parents never did anything to their plants other than feeding and weeding their garden. I'm hoping my plants will produce much more and better fruit since I'll be taking the advice from professionals like this gentleman. Wish me luck. 👍

Oh, btw, I grew Habanera and Piñata peppers from seed and they sprouted about a week ago. No permanent leaves yet but this IS Chicago.

Robert-xpii
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Some of the most helpful growing advice I have seen yet!!

emk
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Last year I began pinching tops, mulching and epsom salt on my peppers. Total game changer.

Wildwwill
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OMG you are so dead on!!! 1st year gardening and that's what happened to me. I thought i had the IQ to figure it out but boy was i wrong. Thinking that i live in the low desert in so cal i even cheated the last frost date to the detriment of my efforts and plants. The 2nd week of April we had 4 consecutive nights in the low 40's. not only did that stunt my peppers, it caused a blight outbreak in my garden due to over watering/over thinking and not taking the last frost date very seriously. I'm such a humble noob lol. To make up for my loss, I went to home depot yesterday and bought a bunch of starter plants to hopefully make up for my noob mistakes. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and i hope your channel is blessed because of your efforts!!!

willh.
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Yup, my father from Hungary always planted 2 peppers together. It was how it is done in his days and always works well.

shadytreez
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After a certain age, we put MORE clothes on! Thanks for all the great info you share!

nysigal
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i HAD A PEPPER AREA, YEARS AGO, BUT I GOT IN THE LIFE GOT IN THE WAY. YOU ARE GIVING ME THE NEW WAY, THANK YOU.

carolkoonce
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I'd have to say that the tip about waiting until it's hotter outside was the most valuable for me. No one else has talked about why a lot of peppers get stunted and stay very small after they've been put out in April or May. I put my peppers out at the beginning of June this year and it made all the difference. I didn't even realize how I'd solved my own problem until I heard your tip. You've saved me a lot of agony from another potentially failed crop of hot peppers.

Free_Falastin
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I just stumbled onto your channel! My lucky day for sure. I've been gardening for many years but everything you discussed here is new to me. Needless to say, my peppers never did well at all( to the point I stopped including them in my garden)....now I know why!

Now I'm gonna go "binge-watch" your other videos! I will no doubt learn a lot!! Thank you 🙂

Kindest regards,
Marlene
(Washington, Pennsylvania)

MarleneSAyres
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I live in Southern Maine. My pepper plants both sweet and hot do very well each year. I have a totally organic garden, sandy rocky soil and other than composted rabbit manure and leaves, i put nothing into the soil for peppers. They seem to do well in soil that drains well and i agree with keeping them warm. I have been using a thick layer of straw around all the plants as we still get chilly nights in the Summer. Grass clippings are good too. I have never used any of these fertilizers as mine grow like bushes and last year my poblanos got almost a hundred peppers per plant. Not all large but very hot buggers. I sometimes have topped a few sometimes not. I love reading all of these comments as knowledge is power when gardening. I guess i'll keep doing what i'm doing as i'm having great results with less being more. I also grow cantaloupes and sugar baby watermelons with good results. I also mulch them with the straw and cover them if it's going to be a really cold night. Temps in Maine can get wacky, it was 98 for two days last week and was only 58 degrees yesterday lol. That's a big swing. Full sun for my guys, Thanks all of you for your comments and input. I was a city slicker until i moved to Cornish Maine and have learned almost everything about gardening from youtube and a couple of great books on organic gardening. My best crops are my tomatoes. Those I put half of an alewife fish into each hole before planting. I catch them in the spring and freeze em until ready to use for fertilizer. They break down quickly. Different climates and soil require different methods. My soil has endless round stones must have been a river bed many moons ago. I rake them out each year making my rows and save them for drainage around my house and other things. From about a foot down it's all sandy and rocks. I'm rambling too much lol. I hope those of you affected by drought this year are able to water your gardens and no lose any plants. We just got rain after a few weeks of nothing. May all of you organic mechanics have a great 2021! tom.

maineguitarists
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Try dark knight sweet pointed pepper they grow almost black b4 ripening red they are soooo tasty

gamerjinx
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Okay buddy, time to say something. I have been watching your videos, I have liked them all that I have watched, I have subscribed with the bell notifications and have used your advice. I am not sure why you do not show you harvesting anything except a test watermelon fail. PLEASE this year, record what you harvest. Thank you so much!! Dan

smitdm