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Old 16-03-2006, 10:26 PM posted to rec.gardens
singingdolphin81
 
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Default Growing Bell Peppers

Hi everyone! I'm new to the group, and well, new to Google groups.
I'm having a lot of fun, finding that these groups are very imformative
and easy to use.

I am starting a Bell Pepper patch for this year's garden. I've started
the seeds indoors (Karma - Red, Golden Summer - Yellow, Valencia
(Orange) and Peppper Parks Whopper), but I don't have much expereince
in caring for the plants once they get planted outside. Can anyone
point me to a good website with some good 'growing' and 'care for'
instructions? I'm mostly looking for watering, fertilizing, and
staking tips and just over all 'caring for the plant' tips.

Also, is anyone famillar with the Karma Red Bell Pepper? I live in the
mid-west... What kind of a yield can I expect to see from one plant and
is this the best kind of Red bell to grow or is there a better kind?
I've listed the four varieties that I'm growing (Red, Yellow, Orange
and Green). It's not too late for me to start different kinds -- are
the the best varieties of bells to grow?

Thanks!!

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Old 16-03-2006, 11:39 PM posted to rec.gardens
Bill
 
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Default Growing Bell Peppers

In article .com,
says...
Hi everyone! I'm new to the group, and well, new to Google groups.


This is not a Google Group. It is a Usenet Newsgroup. You are only
accessing it though Google's urine poor web interface.

I'm having a lot of fun, finding that these groups are very imformative
and easy to use.

I am starting a Bell Pepper patch for this year's garden. I've started
the seeds indoors (Karma - Red, Golden Summer - Yellow, Valencia
(Orange) and Peppper Parks Whopper), but I don't have much expereince
in caring for the plants once they get planted outside. Can anyone
point me to a good website with some good 'growing' and 'care for'
instructions? I'm mostly looking for watering, fertilizing, and
staking tips and just over all 'caring for the plant' tips.


http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/veggies/peppers1.html

Googling will produce others.


Also, is anyone famillar with the Karma Red Bell Pepper? I live in the
mid-west... What kind of a yield can I expect to see from one plant and
is this the best kind of Red bell to grow or is there a better kind?
I've listed the four varieties that I'm growing (Red, Yellow, Orange
and Green). It's not too late for me to start different kinds -- are
the the best varieties of bells to grow?

Thanks!!




Bill
--
Gmail and Google Groups. This century's answer to AOL and WebTV.
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Old 23-03-2006, 10:12 PM posted to rec.gardens
DigitalVinyl
 
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Default Growing Bell Peppers

"singingdolphin81" wrote:

Hi everyone! I'm new to the group, and well, new to Google groups.
I'm having a lot of fun, finding that these groups are very imformative
and easy to use.

I am starting a Bell Pepper patch for this year's garden. I've started
the seeds indoors (Karma - Red, Golden Summer - Yellow, Valencia
(Orange) and Peppper Parks Whopper), but I don't have much expereince
in caring for the plants once they get planted outside. Can anyone
point me to a good website with some good 'growing' and 'care for'
instructions? I'm mostly looking for watering, fertilizing, and
staking tips and just over all 'caring for the plant' tips.

Also, is anyone famillar with the Karma Red Bell Pepper? I live in the
mid-west... What kind of a yield can I expect to see from one plant and
is this the best kind of Red bell to grow or is there a better kind?
I've listed the four varieties that I'm growing (Red, Yellow, Orange
and Green). It's not too late for me to start different kinds -- are
the the best varieties of bells to grow?

Thanks!!


A key point to be careful of is the hardening processing... getting
indoor seedlings acclimated to outside wind, temps and sun. Too much
too soon and it really stunts the plant.

Yeilds can really vary. Some of mine were prolific little buggers..
18-20 bell peppers in a square foot container. Also depends upon if
you're gonna wait for them to turn red. None of the varieties I've
done reliably turned red. A few would start to color, but they
sometimes had rot and damage on them. The ones that ripened to red for
me usually were at the very end of the season(Sept-Oct).

For me, any good strong stake to let the main stem gro around worked.
The weight of a full 2-3 foot tall pepper plant runs in pounds and
summer storms can bend a heavy plant over.

DiGiTAL ViNYL (no email)
Zone 6b/7, Westchester Co, NY, 1 mile off L.I.Sound
4th year gardener
http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/royalf...=/2055&.src=ph
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Old 25-03-2006, 01:06 AM posted to rec.gardens
Jim Carlock
 
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Default Growing Bell Peppers

"DigitalVinyl" wrote:
Yeilds can really vary. Some of mine were prolific little buggers..
18-20 bell peppers in a square foot container.


Do you mean one plant produced 18 to 20 at one time? Or do mean
several plants produced 18 to 20 throughout a whole year? I got
perhaps 18 to 20 serrano peppers off of one plant this year, but I
pulled maybe a dozen at one time then waited a couple weeks to
pull the other dozen. And it's got another dozen on the way. A cherry
tomato plant seems to have worked wonders on it / for it, planted
within an inch of each other.

Unfortunately each of my belle peppers produce a two or three peppers
every 3 months. I'm tempted to put a tomato plant in with them to see
what kind of effect that might have. I've planted green manure plants in
with them (peas), and then some basil in with another. The basil grew
really well so it appears that the belle peppers make a great companion
plant for the lemon basil plant, but it's hard to say that works the other
way.

Jim Carlock
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Old 25-03-2006, 05:13 PM posted to rec.gardens
DigitalVinyl
 
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Default Growing Bell Peppers

"Jim Carlock" wrote:

"DigitalVinyl" wrote:
Yeilds can really vary. Some of mine were prolific little buggers..
18-20 bell peppers in a square foot container.


Do you mean one plant produced 18 to 20 at one time? Or do mean
several plants produced 18 to 20 throughout a whole year?


I went back to my records from 2003
I was wrong , it was the ground plant that produced that many

I had four bell pepper plants(same seeds) within 20 feet, all the same
sun exposure.

Each bell pepper plant produced for the entire season as follows

.... in a 30"x8" windowbox
4 peppers,last harvest sept 13
.... in a 12"x12"x12" square planter
10 peppers, last harvest sept 23
.... in a 36"x24" ground plot, against a wall with overhangs
It was the only plant there
13 peppers, last harvest nov 3
.... in a 60"x36" ground plot, with many other plants around it
I reserved an 18" square for the plant
25 peppers, last harvest nov 3


I got
perhaps 18 to 20 serrano peppers off of one plant this year, but I
pulled maybe a dozen at one time then waited a couple weeks to
pull the other dozen. And it's got another dozen on the way.


The largest of my plants was the last to give me it's first pepper
Sept 3rd I got my first bell from my big plant. My smaller ones gave
up a couple of peppers in mid-late august. Typically I would harvest
them one at a time for the meal I was preparing. Late in the season I
ended up grabbing multiple.

Smaller peppers were more prolific. Jalapenos could be harvested daily
once a few plants get going. Cayenne/chili pepper plants produced more
than I could use. My first year anaheims did poorly, but the next year
I had a reasonable amount.

A cherry
tomato plant seems to have worked wonders on it / for it, planted
within an inch of each other.


My biggest pepper was next to a 4th of July tomato.
Last year none of my peppers did well but I was using a new planting
area also. We also had an early heatwave that roasted some plants in
spring, and my watering attention wasn't what it should have been.

Unfortunately each of my belle peppers produce a two or three peppers
every 3 months. I'm tempted to put a tomato plant in with them to see
what kind of effect that might have. I've planted green manure plants in
with them (peas), and then some basil in with another. The basil grew
really well so it appears that the belle peppers make a great companion
plant for the lemon basil plant, but it's hard to say that works the other
way.

Jim Carlock
Post replies to the group.


DiGiTAL ViNYL (no email)
Zone 6b/7, Westchester Co, NY, 1 mile off L.I.Sound
4th year gardener
http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/royalf...=/2055&.src=ph
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