Also receive the 蜜桃恋人 Daily newsletter including gardening tips, weather, astronomical events, and more.
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!
ADVERTISEMENT
How can I tell if what I have is my bell peppers or a weed
I have a plant with peppers set on. They are in full afternoon sun and on a drip system. One side of the pepper is withered and the other side is still plump. Too much sun, water?
Insects and diseases might cause such symptoms, but it may actually be sunscald. Bell peppers are susceptible to sunscald, which occurs during high temperatures, especially during humid conditions, and direct exposure of the fruit to sunlight during its development. It can appear as faded, papery, blistered, or gray-white sunken areas on the fruit on the side that has been exposed to the sun; the areas will later dry and possibly develop black mold. It is best to have the fruit develop under the leaves; you can provide shade cloth or use row covers to help protect them. Staking plants as they grow also helps fruit to remain under the leaf canopy. Good watering and fertilization at the appropriate times help to develop a good canopy. Hope this helps!
I am growing these peppers in pots on my balcony. I bought then already about 12-15 inches high and planted them in a small pot....too small. They are growing really well however, I am wondering if I should move them to larger pots. There is one plant in each plant and I had little green peppers already on one but am wondering is it ok to transplant without killing now?
It’s OK to keep 鈥減otting up鈥 peppers are they grow. They’re quite adaptable. That said, we usually stop transplanting peppers once they have flowers and fruit as the fruit and blooms may die with transplanting. A 3 gallon pot (14-inch diameter) would be suitable for a couple pepper plants.
I am planting sweet peppers for the first time. I planted them 12 inches apart. now I read they need 18-24 inches space. they are growing nice and tall but are not growing any fruits yet. can I still remove some plants without damaging other roots? what should I do?
Hi Bella,
The 18 to 24 inches of space is a recommendation. 12 inches between each plant should be plenty, so don’t remove any plants. As long as the area where your pepper plants are growing is in full sun, you should be fine. Thanks for writing!
Any tips on how to deal with the desert sun?
Peppers are heat-seeking vegetables which are well suited for desert climates. That said, some pepper varieties do better than others. Jalape帽os do the best, especially when grown in full Sun. Ancho and sweet banana peppers do very well, but produce even more yield when grown under shade cloth. In desert regions at around 4,000 feet of elevation, sweet bell peppers often fail to develop a thick fleshy wall, especially upon ripening, and their quality can be poorer than store-bought bells.
Yellow pepper info