I had two trays of seedling of so many vegetables that ready to be transplanted.
The first tray was full of various chilli peppers.
I sowed the seed on January 25, and the seedlings were transplanted into individual seedling cups on February 9.
Look... I found something so interesting.
I had five cup of 'Filius Blue Pepper' seedlings.
This one was looking so special.
A very little plant...
But look... there were so many flower buds.
Too young...., and too small...
Is this plant ready to start its generative stage?
Do you have a similar experience like mine on your garden?
Did you leave the flower buds on? I know some people would say they need to be taken off so the plant puts all its energy into growing rather than flowering.
ReplyDeleteYes, and I have moved the seedling into bigger pot. I want to know its progress forward.
DeleteSome small peppers are like that and are covered with bloom and peppers, could be the variety that you have, I would see what happens.
ReplyDeleteThe four other seedlings of this variety have 'normal' performance. You can see that the other have bigger and more vigor condition. I'm really interested to see how its growth.
DeleteI'd love to know if you kept the flower buds on or removed them!
ReplyDeleteOh, I kept the flower buds. This is my first experience, so I'm really interested. Again, a new lesson.
DeleteIt may be small but it looks very healthy and fine - as you have five pots with this kind of blue pepper seedling, I think it is fine to let it grow its own way. What an intersteing way of gardening, I like it very much... Sarah
ReplyDeleteThank you Sarah. This little plant is so cute. I don't know the flowers and the fruit forward. This plant became bigger like s normal plant or be a mini plant, I don't know
DeleteEndah, I heard that the peppers should be the first flower bud break.
ReplyDeleteThen you'd better blooms and bears fruit.
I do it very rarely.
Greetings.
Thank Lucia. We will follow the progress. It must be so interesting
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ReplyDeleteEndah Hi, I am criticized the first buds of plants. They grow better and bloom :) Regards. Anna
Thanks Anna. Welcome to my blog. Thank you for stopping by
ReplyDelete