Originally posted by SimpleSimon
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Granted, this is my first year of growing chili plants - maybe 12-14 varieties. I tried to aim for three of each so I could experiment and count losses. Maybe it's the seeds, but I have found radically different results, and not in the same way with any other veg' I grew last year. Exactly the same everything - soil, pot size, water, light, heat, attention... !
I honestly cannot complain too much, as I'm loving the learning experience, but when there is nothing to go on, I just think it must be due to seeds.
I decided to save some seeds from some general store bought sweet peppers, as a main experiment, not wanting to be too hasty with the hotter varieties I spent money on to aquire seeds. My thinking (due to research) would be that these sweet peppers would grow a lot faster, and so I would be able to play around with pinching out, topping, potting on etc... and hopefully be slightly more aware when in comes to my real babies. I'm a noobie, but I thought my plan had at least some rational merrit. Turns out all pepper plants can be complete arses, if they decide to be... and I'm loving it.
Some of the harvested store seeds are busting out with thick stems and lots of growth. A few are starting to bud, so I snipped some off and let the rest carry on. That was almost two weeks ago. Now, they are all completely different: Each and every one seems to be doing it's own thing.
From my reading, I have understood you can stress them out a little to help in the long run, by not watering (combined with maybe some topping). Yeah, great, but the ones I just discarded (lack of room, experiment, and not being arsed to carry so many plants back inside each evening) are busting out with so much lower growth and hardy stems.
Bah... I don't know. I wanted to grow chili plants because I love the general food choices, want to make my own hot sauce recipes, and enjoy their aesthetic as someone might enjoy a particular flower. Now I'm starting to fall in love with their individual quirks as a single plant when compared to the exact same plant sitting right beside.
Maybe it's the thrill of being a virgin chili grower, but I was giving individual names to them in one of those half dreams you have after waking up and then slumbering. I don't want to push it and find myself giving names just out of fancy, but I hope one of them turns out to fit the name "Cassandra Conflation", given what this plant has already had me going through, haha.
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