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- applestar
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- Location: Zone 6, NJ (3/M)4/E ~ 10/M(11/B)
Are you asking because you planted pepper plants or sowed pepper seeds there?
I don’t think I see any …mostly grass, some small leaf weeds — those big plants look like some kind of vines? …Unless they are type of pepper I haven’t grown before. Are they growing in a pattern you planted?
What exactly did you plant (if that’s what you did)?
I don’t think I see any …mostly grass, some small leaf weeds — those big plants look like some kind of vines? …Unless they are type of pepper I haven’t grown before. Are they growing in a pattern you planted?
What exactly did you plant (if that’s what you did)?
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- applestar
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- Location: Zone 6, NJ (3/M)4/E ~ 10/M(11/B)
Typical pepper plants (big fuzzy leaves are eggplants)
Pepper plants typically grow a sucker (new branch stem) at each leafnode (base of leaf stem where it attaches to main stem/trunk) and when reaches flowering stage, split into a forked 2-stem trunk, then these will fork and so on and so on.
(This year, I’m trying a “prune and style” method—heavily pinching the suckers off and removing leaves lower than first fork, support with stake, etc.)
Pepper plants typically grow a sucker (new branch stem) at each leafnode (base of leaf stem where it attaches to main stem/trunk) and when reaches flowering stage, split into a forked 2-stem trunk, then these will fork and so on and so on.
(This year, I’m trying a “prune and style” method—heavily pinching the suckers off and removing leaves lower than first fork, support with stake, etc.)
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- !potatoes!
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