GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Edible Gardening (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/edible-gardening/)
-   -   Chilli Pepper Pots (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/edible-gardening/194170-chilli-pepper-pots.html)

JohnnyGreenHats 21-10-2010 07:38 PM

Chilli Pepper Pots
 
1 Attachment(s)
These two chilli plants were grown at the same time from seed, one in a plastic pot, the other in terracotta. The plant in the plastic pot has 5 peppers and the other has none!

Why do you think this is??

Thanks, Johnny Green Hats.

FarmI 22-10-2010 08:30 AM

Chilli Pepper Pots
 
"JohnnyGreenHats" wrote in message
...

These two chilli plants were grown at the same time from seed, one in a
plastic pot, the other in terracotta. The plant in the plastic pot has 5
peppers and the other has none!

Why do you think this is??


Terracotta dries out quickly and it also gets very hot if in the
sun -plastic does do that as qucikly. Other than that, you'd need to give a
few more clues before I'd ahzard any guess further than those 2
possibilites.



I'll Always Be 22/10/10 22-10-2010 11:24 PM

Chilli Pepper Pots
 
In article ,
"FarmI" ask@itshall be given wrote:

"JohnnyGreenHats" wrote in message
...

These two chilli plants were grown at the same time from seed, one in a
plastic pot, the other in terracotta. The plant in the plastic pot has 5
peppers and the other has none!

Why do you think this is??


Terracotta dries out quickly and it also gets very hot if in the
sun -plastic does do that as qucikly. Other than that, you'd need to give a
few more clues before I'd ahzard any guess further than those 2
possibilites.


Maybe disinfect the terracotta pot.

DogDiesel 23-10-2010 01:19 AM

Chilli Pepper Pots
 

"I'll Always Be 22/10/10" wrote in message
...
In article ,
"FarmI" ask@itshall be given wrote:

"JohnnyGreenHats" wrote in message
...

These two chilli plants were grown at the same time from seed, one in a
plastic pot, the other in terracotta. The plant in the plastic pot has
5
peppers and the other has none!

Why do you think this is??


Terracotta dries out quickly and it also gets very hot if in the
sun -plastic does do that as qucikly. Other than that, you'd need to
give a
few more clues before I'd ahzard any guess further than those 2
possibilites.


Maybe disinfect the terracotta pot.



Maybe plant 50 and see what happens.



spes123 25-10-2010 03:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JohnnyGreenHats (Post 903410)
These two chilli plants were grown at the same time from seed, one in a plastic pot, the other in terracotta. The plant in the plastic pot has 5 peppers and the other has none!

Why do you think this is??

Thanks, Johnny Green Hats.

assuming that both post have had the same treatmesnt as far as watering and feeding, then the on in the terracotta pot will be less developed as terracotta is porous so water is lost through the pot.

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 26-10-2010 01:40 AM

Chilli Pepper Pots
 
spes123 wrote:
JohnnyGreenHats;903410 Wrote:
These two chilli plants were grown at the same time from seed, one
in a plastic pot, the other in terracotta. The plant in the plastic
pot has 5 peppers and the other has none!

Why do you think this is??

Thanks, Johnny Green Hats.


assuming that both post have had the same treatmesnt as far as
watering and feeding, then the on in the terracotta pot will be less
developed as terracotta is porous so water is lost through the pot.



Or maybe the plants are not genetically identical and the difference in the
pots is an unrelated coincidence, or something else. We don't know.

David



aaronbirk 26-10-2010 01:16 PM

The chili plant originated in Latin America, where it was cultivated from its wild form by South American Indians. This plant, after flowering, produces small, spicy chilli peppers for the Hardman Norns to enjoy.

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 26-10-2010 09:15 PM

Chilli Pepper Pots
 
aaronbirk wrote:
The chili plant originated in Latin America, where it was cultivated
from its wild form by South American Indians. This plant, after
flowering, produces small, spicy chilli peppers for the Hardman Norns
to enjoy.



We are amazed.

David

Mathink 27-10-2010 01:36 PM

Did you eat the chilis from one of the plants?

Sorry...


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:21 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter