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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Bell Peppers (Sweet Peppers)
Cooking Notes
Peppers are excellent with almost anything: sandwiches, scrambled eggs, pizza, salads, and dips.
We also enjoy cooking peppers, whether beef stir-fry, smoky roasted peppers, or meat and rice stuffed peppers.
Plus, peppers can be pickled! See how to make pickled peppers!
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Hi, Joan, The temperature of the water should not be extreme at any time; warm water is not going to keep the seeds warm. The black plastic mentioned above is laid on bare ground to warm it; it is not placed on seeds. You'll have better results keeping the seed containers inside until the plants sprout. In fact, see this page for more advice on starting seeds: http://www.almanac.com/content/starting-seeds-indoors
We hope this helps.
I am wondering if the bell pepper plants will produce multiple times or do they just fruit once and the plant is ?
Bell pepper plants are annuals: They produce through one growing season and then die. However, they may produce many peppers through that growing season, and not all at once, so it may seem like they keep producing. And they do鈥攂ut only in one growing season. They will not survive or come back for next growing season. You need to start with new plants or seeds every year. Got it?
Pepper plants are actually perennials but very sensitive to cold so don't do well outside of tropical areas (outside of summertime). Frost will kill them. If you keep them warm and provide a LOT of light, you can actually grow peppers all throughout the winter.
This is going to be the second year(which is miraculous considering how cold our home gets through the winter) I'll be able to bring the same bell pepper plants back outside.
How many years can I continue to expect production out of them?
Thank you, and have a great night!
Bell peppers are tender herbaceous perennials usually grown as annuals in non-tropical conditions. They might last a few years, but they turn woody.
Here is one person's experience with the longevity of various pepper plants:
http://www.homegrown-peppers.com/growing-peppers/how-long-do-pepper-plants-live/
You also might be interested in this page that discusses the wild ancestor of the modern bell pepper. There, it says that it (Capsicum annuum) in its native habitat starts out as herbaceous but does become woody and shrub-like. A short-lived perennial, it usually lasts about 3 to 4 years.
http://www.fs.fed.us/global/iitf/pdf/shrubs/Capsicum%20annuum.pdf
This page is pretty awesome. It has everything you need in it!
do I need a light when I start bell peppers some seeds.
Yes u will need the sun when u plant the seeds
We are going to grow some bell peppers but we're curious if it is safe to plant these close to our housing foundation? Does anyone have any ideas about this?