I have quite a few buds and flowers on my bell pepper plant but they all seem to be dropping off. Would anyone have any advice thanks.
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Bell Pepper plant problem
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Originally posted by Scarlet View PostWhere are you keeping them? I know lots of people say to keep chilli and pepper plants on the dry side but in this weather especially while they are in flower they really do need a good watering. I’m watering mine every day in the greenhouse.
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Jane I grew bell peppers in 10" pots last year and got away with it. By the time the roots had filled the pot they were sitting in their own trays and I was feeding them half strength food constantly, so they could 'suck up' what they needed as and when they wanted. The tray was never dry. I will add they were an experiment as I grew loads and it did work. The rest were grown in 30lit containers individually.
The weather last year was much more typical of the UK and there seemed to be many more insects around compared to this year.
Although usually there is no need to hand pollinate peppers, perhaps it might be worth a try, especially as they are in a greenhouse and my daily temps in there are well over 30c daily even though I live on the coast!
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I’d give them a feed,the nutrients in the compost doesn’t last that long. Potassium like tomato feed helps plant cell health,flowers & fruit.Last edited by Jungle Jane; 10-07-2018, 02:44 PM.Location : Essex
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Originally posted by Mitzi View PostAre there plenty of pollinating insects in the greenhouse? If not, then try hand-pollinating the flowers.Last edited by Scarlet; 10-07-2018, 11:25 PM.
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Originally posted by Jane0o0 View PostWow those look fantastic. I hope mine grow as every time I see the little green pepper popping through it falls off :-( Have a load of buds and around 4 flowers opened.
Once you first pot on your pepper then it has more compost in the pot than root so we water accordingly, enough to keep the roots growing but we don't want to water-log the whole pot. This process takes 4-8wks depending on the weather.
Peppers can take being a little dry in their pots during this process, it gives their roots a purpose, to search for water and makes them grow and reach for moisture ... Apologies if I'm making this sound difficult.
Look after your plant first and the peppers will follow, does this make sense?
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I just about ran out of pots and space, so I put 4 bell peppers in a pot about 18" diameter, hidden behind my tomato plants, they all look strong and healthy, but i've no idea if they have any fruit yet as I can't see them. :-)
Maybe i'll take a look as they may need staking anyway.
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