more transplanting
Posted:
Sat Apr 24, 2010 12:24 am
by Big Guy
Tomatoes before
after, there goes miss needles living room again
garden 150'x150', full of weeds, I need to get the tiller in there, still a little early though
my garlic beds
bed #2
my rhubarb
in the green house
peppers
onions and leeks
a splash of colour
Posted:
Sun Apr 25, 2010 3:07 am
by NCPaul
What types of tomatoes and peppers are you growing this year?
Posted:
Sun Apr 25, 2010 11:04 am
by Big Guy
I'm growing "ultra sonic" , "Early Girl", "jubilee", and "grape" tomatoes.
Sweet peppers I have Early Prolific, fat and sassy, mixed colour bell. Declaration.
hot peppers are jalepeno (9000 sc), serrano (20,000 sc),and big chili (2000 sc)
Posted:
Sun Apr 25, 2010 2:19 pm
by saucisson
I'm attempting some Dorset Naga's this year
Dave
Posted:
Sun Apr 25, 2010 6:40 pm
by NCPaul
That pepper will make you a ghost.
I've watched enough youtube videos of people eating them to not want to waste garden space trying to grow one. Can you actually eat something that hot?
Posted:
Sun Apr 25, 2010 7:15 pm
by dave zac
Big Guy,
What do you do to keep the seedlings from getting too spindly? The ones in the cans look like they are getting that way. Does it matter? I ask because I am starting plants indoors this year for the first time. Some of my squash, cucumber and tomatoes are a lot of stem - 3-4". The larger plants I transplanted from the original flat to peat pots for now. I have 4 weeks until I can get them in the ground though. Can you slow down the spindly growth?
Dave
Posted:
Sun Apr 25, 2010 9:50 pm
by saucisson
NCPaul wrote:That pepper will make you a ghost.
I've watched enough youtube videos of people eating them to not want to waste garden space trying to grow one. Can you actually eat something that hot?
No idea, but I like a challenge
I reckon one would give me enough heat for 10,000 curries so could be interesting
Posted:
Sun Apr 25, 2010 11:27 pm
by Big Guy
dave zac wrote:Big Guy,
What do you do to keep the seedlings from getting too spindly? The ones in the cans look like they are getting that way. Does it matter? I ask because I am starting plants indoors this year for the first time. Some of my squash, cucumber and tomatoes are a lot of stem - 3-4". The larger plants I transplanted from the original flat to peat pots for now. I have 4 weeks until I can get them in the ground though. Can you slow down the spindly growth?
Dave
Yes they start to get spindly, that means they are not getting enough light. I transplant them and bury the spindly stalk, after a week i'll transfer the transplants into my green house witch gets lots of light. They really like to be transplanted . That spindly stalk grows into a fantastic root system if burried.