First time trying to overwinter any kind of plant whatsoever, but I liked the peppers from my Scorpion Trinidad plant so much that I had to at least try, really hopes it survives and I hope I didn't bring in any unwanted visitors. I went with the following method : 1. Clipped the branches 2. Removed from orignal pot outside and tried to get rid of as much dirt as possible 3. Rinsed the roots/plants and cleaned it at least three times with insecticidal soap 4. Put in a brand new container with dirt for inside plants from a freshly sealed bag.

by spicyytao

14 Comments

  1. geronimogriza

    Okay okay an Aston Martin – LOTR fan here… good luck overwintering!

  2. Scrappyz_zg

    Same method I will use for my habanero. Post again in spring and let us know how it goes!

  3. fishegg808

    I’ll be trying the same with two of my scotch bonnets….fingers-crossed

  4. Compost-Mentis

    Looks like a great job. For what its worth I’ve found the trick to overwintering to be the moisture level of the soil -the first year I tried it I let them get too wet and lost quite a few, the second year I over compensated and let them stay too dry for too long and lost almost all of them! I think watering once a week until they start to wake up and then more often is what to aim for.

  5. Please explain further the insecticide soap process. Brand/mixture of things/etc. TIA

  6. TurningTwo

    I just dig them out of the ground, put them in a pot, and set them on the floor next to a south-facing sliding glass door. They make fresh peppers all winter.

  7. Due_Platform_5327

    The harsh treatment usually gets rid of the bugs, now it’s whether the plant survives it and through the winter. 

  8. Para_Para

    Not sure what your room there is like but you might want to get them into a cooler/darker spot to really get them to go dormant.

    I have a few fataliis and red habs that I have overwintered, one just ending it’s 4th growing season and a few others ending their 2nd/3rd summer. They’re in 5-7 gallon fabric pots.

    I cut them just like yours but don’t even really repot or rinse roots or anything like that. I do keep them in my garage as warmer temps and light seem to wake them up. Even then they still try to push leaves near end of January and I have to pinch off for a while to get into March where at least we have some outdoor days. (7a/b, North Atlanta burbs). I water every 2-3 weeks during hibernation.

  9. I would think that would be good…I have a 3 year old Trinidad scorpion I have done this too each winter and never had an issue

  10. Perfect prune. gonna be fine. I overwintered two scorpions last year and they both survived. I placed them near a basement window and gave them a tiny bit of water once in a while. I’m surprised you pulled yours already. My scorpions are still producing. I have a sugar rush peach pepper plant that is 3 years old. Not sure I’ll overwinter again. My new plants seem to produce just as much. At 2 years old, my scorpions are about 4 foot tall bushes.

  11. Not sure where you all are.
    In central Jersey and will try to over winter my plant.
    Remove all the leaves?
    How cold can they handle ?

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