Honestly when people are looking for instructions videos this is not the place. She provides NO good information! I'm sure she is a nice person and a good gardener but more information is needed in order to please viewers.
@minorshrimp No, your plants should be much smaller. Get out your bypass pruners and nub that plant's main stem back down to about 8 inches tall. Then trim any excess leaves so that the plant is no more than 6 inches wide. Finally, if you make up a solution of about 2 tablespoons sodium chloride in a half gallon of warm water, and then pour that all around the base of the plant so it will be sure to soak the roots, you can be assured that the plant will not regrow to such a height again.
@buddybleau Yeah. That's exactly what I do. With peppers I just cover the with enough soul to where you can't see it and I water it from the bottom by using biodegradable peatpots and putting them in a something that will hold water. I use old baking sheets. lol.
@Ogizzie Sounds like you know what you're doing. I use old styrofoam coffee cups for my seedlings. I punch a hole in the bottom of the cups and I also set them in water. Good luck. Thanks for the comment.
@Ogizzie But she's an expert because she has a video on youtube. 99% of the world's experts are simply run-of-the mill people who step forward and promote their opinions. Hey, the lady never actually planted a pepper seed that came up. But that doesn't keep her from being an expert. and 70 degrees at night? I would never grow a pepper if that was the rule. Glad I'm my own expert so I don't have to listen to this miss know nothing.
I live in a tropical climate, and our summers are ridiculously hot as well (although ours is a humid heat, and I would think yours is a dry heat), but for some reason peppers are the only plant that does well in the summer for me... except melons which grow like weeds here.
I live in tropical north QLD, and want to grow capsicums. I have chilli plants and its growing amazingly with chillis after only 6 weeks from seed... will capsicum grow here also? I thought they are a similar family?
@waynebw They are the same family, basically the same plant, although chillis and bell peppers have been cultivated away from one another, so that the bells are sweet and do better in a milder climate.
So, chillis are better for hot supersunny weather, where bell peppers prefer the weather a bit milder
MILF
MoFoHardstyle 1 month ago
Anyone else notice the sticker she failed to remove from her store-bought bell pepper?
STRlFE 3 months ago
Honestly when people are looking for instructions videos this is not the place. She provides NO good information! I'm sure she is a nice person and a good gardener but more information is needed in order to please viewers.
KevinFulcrum 4 months ago
Wow so many mean cruel people out there...This world is so sad.
buffaloborn71 5 months ago
Does anyone else notice her left leg violently spazzing in the close up?
bobkelso4245 6 months ago
@bone2thebone oh yes she has...lol
bowler8 7 months ago
she's useless
bowler8 7 months ago
stupid bitch.
victorianguyen112 7 months ago
GOOD DRAINAGE IS GOOD?!?!?!? Intriguing!
sneakytaylor 7 months ago
19 People had went to home depot to buy their bell pepper plant instead of growing them from seeds.
KurotsuchiKisuke 8 months ago
16 people had done what this woman had said and their bell pepper plants did not grow in the process.
KurotsuchiKisuke 8 months ago
That must be some kind of special pepper seeing that it already has a bar code sticker on it
asquaregarden 8 months ago
it must be 1.3 cm deep not 2 inches
MegaAndrey121 8 months ago
Expert Village... that's the joke.
jayops 8 months ago
12 peoples bell peppers didnt grow...
RustfaceDUBSTEP 9 months ago
I see a sticker on that pepper. Guess she didn't grow it.
AvaSimmons 9 months ago
ehow is the reason the worlds idiot population is rising
random5495 10 months ago
2 inches deep?..... i always put mine about 1/4 and 95% of my seeds grow
PsilocybinDream 1 year ago 3
lol i love how she is using a bell pepper from the store,
Brndon076 1 year ago
Moral: Put plant/seed in ground. Wait.
Very UNinformative.
hjones1 1 year ago 9
I have about 6 plants, but 2 of them are about 3 1/2 ft tall by 4ft wide. Are they supposed to be that big?
minorshrimp 1 year ago
@minorshrimp No, your plants should be much smaller. Get out your bypass pruners and nub that plant's main stem back down to about 8 inches tall. Then trim any excess leaves so that the plant is no more than 6 inches wide. Finally, if you make up a solution of about 2 tablespoons sodium chloride in a half gallon of warm water, and then pour that all around the base of the plant so it will be sure to soak the roots, you can be assured that the plant will not regrow to such a height again.
Me112233 9 months ago
This womern must be on crack. Plant the seeds 2 INCHES DEEP? HELL NAW!
Take this womerns advice, and good luck failing on germination
Ogizzie 1 year ago 11
@Ogizzie
ive had success.
soulshakedown909 1 year ago
@Ogizzie Best way to judge how deep to plant a seed. Just go as deep as the seed is tall. That's it. Good luck.
buddybleau 10 months ago
@buddybleau Yeah. That's exactly what I do. With peppers I just cover the with enough soul to where you can't see it and I water it from the bottom by using biodegradable peatpots and putting them in a something that will hold water. I use old baking sheets. lol.
Ogizzie 9 months ago
@Ogizzie Sounds like you know what you're doing. I use old styrofoam coffee cups for my seedlings. I punch a hole in the bottom of the cups and I also set them in water. Good luck. Thanks for the comment.
buddybleau 9 months ago
@Ogizzie But she's an expert because she has a video on youtube. 99% of the world's experts are simply run-of-the mill people who step forward and promote their opinions. Hey, the lady never actually planted a pepper seed that came up. But that doesn't keep her from being an expert. and 70 degrees at night? I would never grow a pepper if that was the rule. Glad I'm my own expert so I don't have to listen to this miss know nothing.
Me112233 9 months ago
@Ogizzie Plants will grow if you get them in the ground.
fishrcoolturtles2 3 months ago
Is it just me or is her leg freaking out?
godsspartin117 1 year ago
@godsspartin117 Tremors from orgasm, got her vibrating panties on.
DammitDrag 1 year ago
@godsspartin117
lol that's what happens when you are arround bell peppers too long!
Anonimouse52 1 year ago
yolanda has a voluptous lucious body with beautiful milking situation.
Shutkaroo 1 year ago
@Shutkaroo I'd like to plant a few seeds in her garden.
FreeTalkLive 1 year ago
Ur stupid
321man1 1 year ago
It's too hot to grow these where I live, they are a winter crop for me here in Northern Australia.
aus2045 2 years ago
I live in a tropical climate, and our summers are ridiculously hot as well (although ours is a humid heat, and I would think yours is a dry heat), but for some reason peppers are the only plant that does well in the summer for me... except melons which grow like weeds here.
KWalsh554 2 years ago
I live in tropical north QLD, and want to grow capsicums. I have chilli plants and its growing amazingly with chillis after only 6 weeks from seed... will capsicum grow here also? I thought they are a similar family?
waynebw 1 year ago
@waynebw They are the same family, basically the same plant, although chillis and bell peppers have been cultivated away from one another, so that the bells are sweet and do better in a milder climate.
So, chillis are better for hot supersunny weather, where bell peppers prefer the weather a bit milder
Uberownager 1 year ago