Update: My local garden center is a life saver.I’ve never grown super-hots before, any tips?
Update: My local garden center is a life saver.I’ve never grown super-hots before, any tips?
by Woodland-wanderer24
10 Comments
stifisnafu
Yep, Rule no.1… Be patient 😁
Ramo2653
As someone that grows super hots in Wisconsin, there really aren’t any differences from growing other varieties. Maintain the water level, use fertilizer or really nutrient rich soil and watch out of pests. They will take longer to ripen so keep that in mind.
Woodland-wanderer24
Just context on the last picture. I’m still getting frost in my area, so the plants are staying in a smaller greenhouse in the greenhouse
CaptainPolaroid
If you have other plants in there. Give the new plants the atomic treatment. I grow from seed. Every time I brought plants in from an outside source, it either gave me aphids, whitefly or thrips..
I used a pyrethrin shower and root watering.
simple_champ
I have had good results doing epsom salt foliar spray on my hot peppers.
genericnekomusum
Have you ever handled super hot chillies before?
Novel-Intention3895
Then strawberries looking good
hotsauceboss222
Water, sun, proper soil, and fertilize off to the races. They grow very easily. Look in to fermented hot sauce for the product. Jilmo has a great kit for cheap.
__Pseudonym
Its cool and novel at first. When I grew super hots I had no clue what to do with the peppers. They’re too spicy to work with comfortably in my opinion, so my tip is to start thinking about what you’ll do with them if you can’t handle the heat. Oh also, definitely top them and support them with stakes well. They’re going to produce like crazy if you do and they’ll need support.
diziscurran
Leave them outside in the sun the grow amazing but with ALOT of water
10 Comments
Yep, Rule no.1… Be patient 😁
As someone that grows super hots in Wisconsin, there really aren’t any differences from growing other varieties. Maintain the water level, use fertilizer or really nutrient rich soil and watch out of pests. They will take longer to ripen so keep that in mind.
Just context on the last picture. I’m still getting frost in my area, so the plants are staying in a smaller greenhouse in the greenhouse
If you have other plants in there. Give the new plants the atomic treatment. I grow from seed. Every time I brought plants in from an outside source, it either gave me aphids, whitefly or thrips..
I used a pyrethrin shower and root watering.
I have had good results doing epsom salt foliar spray on my hot peppers.
Have you ever handled super hot chillies before?
Then strawberries looking good
Water, sun, proper soil, and fertilize off to the races. They grow very easily. Look in to fermented hot sauce for the product. Jilmo has a great kit for cheap.
Its cool and novel at first. When I grew super hots I had no clue what to do with the peppers. They’re too spicy to work with comfortably in my opinion, so my tip is to start thinking about what you’ll do with them if you can’t handle the heat. Oh also, definitely top them and support them with stakes well. They’re going to produce like crazy if you do and they’ll need support.
Leave them outside in the sun the grow amazing but with ALOT of water