Green peppers stopped growing
Hi, I have a few beautiful green peppers that started growing. They grew to about 1/2 size of what they should be and just stopped. They still look very healthy and don't look like they're lacking nutrients at all. Does anyone know why that happened? They haven't grown in size for 3 or 4 weeks now.
- rainbowgardener
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What's the weather like? I have green pepper plants just sitting there doing hardly anything. I think it is the combination of very wet weather all season so far, too much water and not enough sunshine, and the fact that the patio where they are planted has gotten very shady as the trees around it got bigger, so even more not enough sun...
- stella1751
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If you are talking the pepper fruit, they are settling in to their wall-thickening and flavorization stage. They will not get any bigger. It happens. On occasion, peppers will grow a first small harvest and then stop. If you pick those, they should go into their real production stage.
If you are talking about the plants, well, they should continue to grow all year long. Try giving them some compost tea. They love compost tea! If you don't have that, then a mix of fish fertilzer and seaweed solution should perk them up.
If you are talking about the plants, well, they should continue to grow all year long. Try giving them some compost tea. They love compost tea! If you don't have that, then a mix of fish fertilzer and seaweed solution should perk them up.
- stella1751
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Here's what Shepherd Ogden has to say about peppers in his book Step by Step Organic Vegetable Gardening:
The reason the fruits are so small could be that the plant was still young when it began producing them. This may sound dumb, but the younger a woman is, the more likely she is to produce a smaller than average baby If that's the case, then your next fruit set on your mature plant could be regular sized.
Look at nutrition, too, though
- Pepper plants may also set a few fruit during the good weather in early summer, then apparently forget what they are supposed to be doing; if you wait for the first few to ripen fully, it may be too late for a second set to ripen fully where seasons are short. To be practical about it, I'd recommend taking half your plants and pinching out the first setting of fruit once they are the size of a marble; they will flower with renewed vigor and give you a bumper crop late in the season. The other half of the plants can be allowed to set a few fruit early and mature them for the first harvest.
The reason the fruits are so small could be that the plant was still young when it began producing them. This may sound dumb, but the younger a woman is, the more likely she is to produce a smaller than average baby If that's the case, then your next fruit set on your mature plant could be regular sized.
Look at nutrition, too, though