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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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If you are concerned about soil contaminants, you might want to have a soil test done beforehand. Your county's Cooperative Extension may be able to give you some names of soil testing labs that test for contaminants. If your home has been built before 1978, and was painted, it may be that it was with lead paint. In this case, we'd suggest having your soil tested, not planting edibles near the foundation, and using a raised bed further out in the yard.
For more information, you might see:
http://homeguides.sfgate.com/soil-contamination-testing-22559.html
Gardening guidelines for soil with lead:
http://www.douglascountyhealth.com/healthy-children/lead-poisoning-prevention/soil-lead-facts
I'm planting mini sweets peppers can i grow these inside, take them in and out everyday if so what size pot would i need
Depending on where you live, it is a little too cold now to grow peppers outdoors (they like warmth). In general, mini sweet bell peppers can grow in a 5-gallon pot, about 12 inches deep and 12 inches wide. One plant per pot. You can certainly grow them in a greenhouse. If you do not have a greenhouse, but have a location that will be about 70F to 80F or so in temperature consistently, then you can grow them indoors over winter. They will need about 14 to 16 hours of daylight or fluorescent grow lights (1 cool bulb type, 1 warm) per day. Set the plant lights about 4 to 6 inches above the plants. You will need to hand pollinate the flowers to encourage fruiting. Keep up with the watering. Good luck!
HI, Do you have a list of effects of climate change in bell pepper? like high temperature and precipitation
I would like to overwinter my yellow bell peppers, but don't have enough space or light in the house. So I bought a portable Greenhouse (56 x 56 x 77 inches). The peppers are in air pruning pots and I live in zone 8b.
Will they make it alright through the winter in there as is, or do I need to provide a heat source? How low can the temperature get, before it hurts them?
If I need to heat the greenhouse, what would you suggest as heat source that is not too expensive?
It depends on how cold it gets in the winter. You may be OK with a couple of seedling heat mats under the pots or you can get a couple of heating lamps and turn them on before a cold front approaches. A small space heater with a fan will also work.
For 2 years I have planted green peppers in the spring with my other plants and I don't harvest any peppers until mid-September.The plants are healthy and leafy but flowers don't appear until august , what can i change to harvest them in the summer.
Use miracle grow potting soil if u havnt already. It will make your flowers blume earlier and faster. While at the same time u will have a healthier plant that will produce flowers sumtimes within a week or two uwill have small peppers come out wen the accuall flower falls off. Just like the regular process but a lil faster. Ive harvested a numbrr of really greally great peppers starting in august an im still pulling off more and more
Yes mirical grow is very helpful with gardens last year we used it and our garden was a great success
Peppers like warm soil, above 65F. Cold soil may slow the flowering process. You might try choosing an early-maturing variety, and placing black plastic over the soil a week or two before planting (see above for recommended planting times) and leaving it there after sowing seeds or transplanting. The black plastic will help to keep the soil warm. In colder climates, start the seeds indoors. Hope this helps!