Do you guys trim all of the branching at the bottom and just try to focus the energy on the canopy?

by SomgFusion

11 Comments

  1. Equivalent-Idea-9924

    I trim the bottom portion. To allow for airflow and help deter pests

  2. MerrikObserves

    Do not touch those baby branches! The best shaped pepper plant is typically short and wide. Those branches are like miniature pepper plants. Enough of them really adds a lot of real estate for peppers by growing more outwards, eventually looking like a leaf-umbrella.

    Also if you clip the mature leaves, those branches often don’t appear. The leaf pumps energy directly where it’s needed for the new branch to grow.

    Let them grow, brace them with gardening poles against wind and pepper weight. You’ll be very happy!

  3. fishlore123

    Are you wanting to enjoy the most fruits for your labor? Or win someone else’s approval by doing this? Thats a personal question, not one that I need an answer to. Cutting or trimming a plant is inflicting a wound that will require energy to repair..energy taken from things like growing bigger or hardier. I would rather see you pot your plants with adequate support (tomato cages or stakes) that you can utilize as needed) than cut or trim a growing plant

  4. _NotAlien_

    I would. I’d trim all the bottom stuff until you get to the big leaves.

  5. Planticus-_-Leaficus

    I would trim off about 3 of the smaller or worst placed shoots. That’s about it. Get some bamboo stakes or chopsticks so that as it creates an umbrella shape, you can give support to the most horizontal branches. Support = more fruit

  6. Affectionate-Baby757

    You don’t need to trim anything, but personally I trim any bottom leaves that are touching the ground, seems like those leaves are just begging pests to come up

  7. No_Limit3251

    Let it grow, the older big leafs look ready to let new growth take over.

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