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newindc

Part III pepper plants still not flowering

newindc
16 years ago

Hi,

I've posted two previous messages and received some helpful feedback. I have one each red, yellow, and green pepper plant growing in an earth box. Of the three plants, not one has set flowers since I planted in May! They continue to grow up and add new leaves and look very healthy, however. Many of you said that this could not be due to too much nitrogen, as I only used about half of the package of the fertilizer that came with the earth box. I also have the cover on the box as per the instructions. Several of you suggested patience...but my last posting was July 4 and there's still no change!

So--what should I try next? Is there any sense in cutting them down radically? Or in trying to take out the fertilizer strip in the earth box?

Thanks,

Lindsay

Comments (20)

  • korney19
    16 years ago

    Just try a foliar feeding with a water soluble fertilizer labeled as a "Bloom Booster" or add some superphosphate to the earthbox if possible. Walmart has their own brand of water soluble bloom booster formula or look for Miracle-Gro Bloom Booster or Miracle-Gro 15-30-15.

  • annie-lee
    16 years ago

    I would shy away from any of the "booster", because the plants is growing very rigorously as you indicated. Make sure they are watered everyday on these hot summer days. Do they show distress under the hot sun? Try water them in the early morning.

  • newindc
    Original Author
    16 years ago

    Thanks for the responses. The plants are showing absolutely no distress. I do water the earth box daily, usually in the early morning or late at night. The plants receive about 5 hours of sunlight on my balcony--they are on a SE corner and get late morning and early to mid afternoon light. Any more thoughts??

  • korney19
    16 years ago

    Annie-lee, there are 3 plants in 1 container and the poster used only half the amount of fertilizer recommended. Unless it's lack of sunlight, one dose of 15-30-15 is by no means too much for this combo. If they used a teaspoon in a gallon of water, this would be equivalent to 5-10-5. If they used a tablespoon, it would be like using a teaspoon of 5-10-5 per plant.

    The term "bloom booster" is somewhat misleading because most bloom boosters are closer to 10-52-8, or 10-52-10. Miracle-Gro changed their names on some of their products and the old "All Purpose" 15-30-15 they now call the "bloom booster" and the "All Purpose" now has too much nitrogen imbalance for fruiting plants like tomatoes & peppers. It's easier to find Miracle-Gro 15-30-15 than Sam's Choice 10-52-10...

  • annie-lee
    16 years ago

    5 hours of sun? That's too little sun for any fruit producing veggies. Can you move them to where they can get more sun?

  • Violet_Z6
    16 years ago

    I missed the part about limited sun... yes, definitely move them to an area where they get at least 8 hours of direct full sun or supplement with really good grow lights.

  • korney19
    16 years ago

    What are the actual variety names?

    I planted my peppers June 8th thru 16th and already have some fruits 6-9" long...

  • gumby_ct
    16 years ago

    -- The plants receive about 5 hours of sunlight on my balcony--they are on a SE corner and get late morning and early to mid afternoon light. Any more thoughts??

    Sure, Make sure this is DIRECT sunlight as in no shadows (unobstructed). Peppers like heat and need FULL sun with min. 6-8 hours of DIRECT sunlight.

    I am not sure what the ref. to a cover was about. Why would peppers be covered this time of year?

    I remember one year planting tomatoes in a neighbors yard. Tomatoes looked great, a lush green, bushy, plenty of blossoms, just NO fruit. Went half the season trying to figure out why.

    Finally, someone mentioned sunlight, I said sure they are out in the open and get sunlight ALL day. When I timed it, they were getting DIRECT sun for an hour & half. Problem solved.

    The plants were out in the open but trees bordering the yard were blocking the sun the rest of the day.

    Do yourself a favor....

    Good Luck,
    Gumby_CT

    Here is a link that might be useful: Capsicum annuum and C. frutescens

  • Pyewacket
    16 years ago

    You can get triple phosphate (0 - 46 - 0) for a bloom booster for under $10 from a local Do-It Best affiliated hardware store. No nitrogen so if too much nitrogen is the problem, you won't be adding to it.

    If they're bell peppers they could just be taking more time to set fruit - they take longer than hot peppers.

    Check

    http://doitbest.com/

    For a store near you.

    Sojourner

  • Pyewacket
    16 years ago

    Hey, I just thought - are you getting blossom drop? If so, then you could try a little bit of Epsom salts.

    Maybe someone already asked this, but what did you use for planting medium?

    Sojourner

  • flowerchild5
    16 years ago

    I just noticed this post and was drawn to it as i am sort of having the same problem. my pepper plants that get full sun for about 10-12 hours are not growing at all. theyve been stunted since may also. we started these in my bosses greenhouse back in late march or april. his are gorgoeus with huge peppers. mine are jalapeno, north star bell and anaheims. the peppers I put in the flower garden as i ran out of room in the veggie beds (went onion crazy) are doing great! they are growing fine and they don't get quite as much sun. they all recieved the same amount of fertilizer. is this wierd or what? I am not gonna have enough peppers for salsa next month at this rate. and i refuse to pay $6 a pound for anaheims!!
    tanya

  • annie-lee
    16 years ago

    Tanya,
    So you get enough sun. But you may have different problems. Your soil may not be good enough. Your pepper plants may had been stunted since seedlings. There is no hope for a pepper plant once it is stunted, so I woulndn't mind to pull one up and see whether it has a rigorous root system. I doubt it. Also do you water it enough? IMO it is much more important for peppers to have adquate water than fertilizer.

  • whynotmi
    16 years ago

    I too am patiently waiting for my peppers (red beauties) to do their thing. I planted 4 and 2 set 1 fruit each pretty early on. Since then not a single blossom. The 3rd set 1 fruit about 3 weeks ago and another two weeks ago. The 4th set fruit about a month ago and hasn't had a blossom since. That's it. I had plenty of blossoms early on but nothing's been happening since those 1st fruits set. C'mon peppers!!

  • flowerchild5
    16 years ago

    my peppers were about a ft tall and looked awesome when i planted them. and I have great soil. everything else is huge. what i am thinking and i could be wrong is that i overlaid the entire garden (all raised beds) with well aged dairy compost. i do not till it in because i do not want to harm all the beneficial worms. maybe the peppers do not like the compost. i've done this for years and the peppers are the only thing i have problems with. about 5 yrs ago i had peppers coming out my ears!!! I put the compost on all my flower beds also but in the particular flower bed i put the other peppers it did not get quite as much cuz i ran out of compost. i had already put down 16 yrds of compost and just couldnt get any more. anyway, that is just a theory of course. i am not going to give up on them quite yet.
    thanks for the input!
    Tanya

  • pyrenese
    3 years ago

    My scotch bonnet is not flowering. My jalapeno, poblanos, sweet italian, and cayenne are doing great. I filled in some mushroom compost this year. 1st time to do this. It turned my soil to a clay like texture. My zucchini, cucumbers, and corn are awesome. Will not use mushroom compost again. My tomatoes are 5 feet tall with all the leaves curled. Flowering but no tomatoes from 6 plants. Last year over grown with tomatoes.

  • Linda Jakle
    3 years ago

    Two things I did not see mentioned. Don’t cover peppers, they are wind pollinated. Peppers can be stunted early on with cold air or soil temps and they will not produce with nighttime temps above 75 or daytime temps over 90. I too am having pepper issues this year and I am blaming it on a lack of sun early on with lots of cloudy days followed by extreme heat.

  • Joe Agnew
    3 years ago


    Help!

  • Joe Agnew
    3 years ago

    Help.why?

  • Richa Chauhan
    3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    Go for 3G cutting and vermicompost.

    Pruning the new leaves trigger new branch growth and it will be bushy chilli plant. Evrytime you prune, add compost as the plant will need more nutritin for growth.


    Water only when the leaves look droopy.


    Look for signs of pests like miley bugs etc. They cause leaf damage and stunted growth.