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Old 20-07-2006, 01:06 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Chris Hogg
 
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Default Lesions on bell peppers

I am growing bell peppers for the first time, from seed recovered from
ones bought in our local supermarket. The plants are in gro-bags, on
benches in the greenhouse, four to a bag. They are about 2ft high, and
I have pinched out the tops as they are now almost touching the glass
roof. The greenhouse is well ventilated during the day, and never
fully closed up even at night.

The plants are not shaded and get watered daily, sometimes twice a day
in this recent hot spell, and fed with Tomorite tomato feed once a
week at the recommended strength. I have no problem with amount of
flower or with fruit setting (I go round every couple of days with a
soft paint brush), and there are plenty of fruits swelling on each
bush. But once they get to the size of small satsuma oranges, many of
them develop dark, brownish, sunken lesions that spread through the
fruit.

What's causing the problem, and how do I prevent it?


--
Chris

E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net
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Old 20-07-2006, 02:18 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Gardening_Convert
 
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Default Lesions on bell peppers


Chris Hogg wrote:
I am growing bell peppers for the first time, from seed recovered from
ones bought in our local supermarket. The plants are in gro-bags, on
benches in the greenhouse, four to a bag. They are about 2ft high, and
I have pinched out the tops as they are now almost touching the glass
roof. The greenhouse is well ventilated during the day, and never
fully closed up even at night.

The plants are not shaded and get watered daily, sometimes twice a day
in this recent hot spell, and fed with Tomorite tomato feed once a
week at the recommended strength. I have no problem with amount of
flower or with fruit setting (I go round every couple of days with a
soft paint brush), and there are plenty of fruits swelling on each
bush. But once they get to the size of small satsuma oranges, many of
them develop dark, brownish, sunken lesions that spread through the
fruit.

What's causing the problem, and how do I prevent it?


--
Chris

E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net


Chris ,
Could it be Blight as peppers are from the same family as
tomatoes so can suffer the same diseases .
Well that what I saw Bob Flowerdew talk about on a gardening programme
the other night anyway.

Although I'm not an expert just an amature that watches lots of
gardening programmes

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Old 22-07-2006, 06:25 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Chris Hogg
 
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Default Lesions on bell peppers

On 20 Jul 2006 06:18:23 -0700, "Gardening_Convert"
wrote:


Chris ,
Could it be Blight as peppers are from the same family as
tomatoes so can suffer the same diseases .
Well that what I saw Bob Flowerdew talk about on a gardening programme
the other night anyway.

Although I'm not an expert just an amature that watches lots of
gardening programmes



Thanks for that suggestion. I'll follow it up.


--
Chris

E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net
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