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myfirstgarden
Leafing Out
The size of the fruit is most likely due to the size of of the container 1/2 gallon and amount of water. I water about once a day for about 10 seconds. It does not rain in the summer where I live.Dave2000 said:What sized container and how big is the plant? Pictures might help. How often and how much water are you giving them? What's your seasonal rainfall rate, under average, average, or above average? If under average I tend to think it's watering too little for the temperatures that is causing insufficient calcium uptake.myfirstgarden said:Thanks for the replies. Gardening and my garden would not be the same without the you guys.
I live in Chico, California, Zone 9 gardening. These come from container plants, so the plant may have drained all the calcium out. Maybe I should add more?? Like you said, maybe it is just the first, because all the others look fine. They are extremely miniature though, which I equate to them being in containers.
Is this virgin soil or have you grown in it previously and now it'd being reused?
Do you overwater to the point that it always comes out the bottom of the pot?
Generally it takes a while to deplete typical soil of calcium, a reason why it's low if there's a reasonable quantity of soil. Have you been fertilizing and if so, with what? Do you mean small plant or small fruit or both? What are you comparing against, I grow a bell strain that is nowhere near as big as the strain they sell at local grocery stores but it has more taste.
Given a good sized container, say 5 gallon or more you should't be seeing significant stunting of plant growth yet - they may eventually not be as big as if in a larger container or the ground and take longer to get to their final size but this may be more due to moisture fluctuations and fertilizer vs soil nutrient level issues. If you have not put any type of fertilizer on them then you might do that, not just calcium but at least something with NPK in it whether synthetic or organic, and a little magnesium wouldn't hurt either.
These are not to address the blossom end rot, just the small size.
Virgin soil. I may have over watered once.
I do not think I've fertilized this plant. I've been giving the bigger plants fish emulsion. What do you guys think about fish emulsion as a fertilizer?
Small fruits. It's the biggest pepper plant I have, but not sure how big they can really get. I'm comparing it to the farmers market produce.
Would it be to late to transplant the plant into a bigger pot? It already has 3-5 peppers on it.
I am also having trouble with other pepper plants. They are in one gallon containers and stunted. I bought them late in the season from a nursery about 1 month ago and still have not grown from the size I bought them. Could they have been damaged from being in such a small container for too long?