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gardeners who grow their tomatoes from seed usually get fairly quick
results after sowing the seeds indoors. Given the right germinating
conditions - a soilless planting mix, good drainage, plenty of light, plenty of warmth - tomato seeds can pop up in 8-10 days.
Pepper seeds are a different story. Why is it some peppers can take weeks to germinate?
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg7USepT9anfbJTaxoHm9zFCJMeVsbgl0ply0pW-g37P2HhTHPHkIaReByXJ6Fs67JSB9lHa6gC_OwhLXwMf1JGVn_6dFQGbLqc4uuRWDZcEAFfDCfmRl57mnHhDPxEWXZjB1Zot2X6OLE/s320/tomato+pepper+seedlings1.jpg)
For those who want to comparison shop, another source for heating mats for your pepper seeds: Amazon.
Another
trick that some gardeners employ is soaking the pepper seed for a few
hours before sowing to soften the seed coat. The value of that is open
to debate.
"I have never heard of soaking pepper seed overnight and have never done it in 20 years of running a trial garden," says Shepherd.
On
the other hand, Professor Debbie Flower, formerly of the American River College
Horticulture Department, sees the benefits of some "immersion therapy"
for pepper seeds. "We soaked our pepper seeds in hydrogen peroxide for
10 minutes," explains Flower. "That's not enough time to scarify (soften
or break the seedcoat), or even get them soaked, but enough to kill
exterior diseases."
Many
sweet pepper varieties will show their initial leaves about two weeks
after planting the seeds. But some varieties of peppers take longer to
pop up than others. "The hot pepper varieties take longer to germinate,
some to three weeks," says Flower.
But
if you are experimenting with the really hot pepper varieties, such as
the Bhut Jolokia (Ghost Pepper), it could take up to four months, says
the Trade Winds Fruit website:
"Chinense
species (e.g. Habanero's) generally take longer to germinate than most
common peppers. Keep soil warm to very warm (75-90F) for better
germination. Do not use acidic soil. Some Chinense peppers, in
particular Bhut Jolokia, Naga Morich and related peppers are very slow
to germinate, averaging 1-4 months germination time."
By
the way, if you are growing the Bhut Jolokia...you're playing with
fire. The Ghost Pepper is rated at 850,000 Scoville units of heat. For
comparison, the habanero rates 200,000; the Jalapeno is 5,000; the
Anaheim equals 1,000. And sweet bell peppers? 0.
![]() |
This is as hot as I can stand. The Inferno: 4,000 Scoville Heat Units |
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![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhghwvGSxCaC251jMQH869j2e2P8qGQy8EW3f7-A2tibInaJGX4UjDkuYEPgmO1ehZaonKzrHHhMgj3BA1kLNQmvBgEC6qJd6-o49CxQjkLv-46cPff1cZnMvoc6vFnFS83Qw5kNe5jLrg/s320/Peppers+2009b.jpg)
Here in the Sacramento area, that would be around mid-May. Be patient.
Now, for the MORE tips portion: Since first posted eight years ago, this blog report has received a lot of attention. The beauty of that...lots of pepper growers have chimed in about their preferred methods for growing peppers.
One method that was seconded by many: germinate your pepper seeds in between two moist paper towels in a room that is between 70 and 80 degrees. For many, that room might be the kitchen or bathroom. When the "tails" appear after about 6 or 7 days (the tails, by the way, are the emerging roots), gently transplant them into a moist, seed starting mix, preferably one that uses the more neutral coir instead of the lower pH peat moss. Or, make your own. My preferred home mix consists of equal parts coir, perlite and fine compost.
The improvements I would make to that germination suggestion? Use coffee filters instead of paper towels. That way, the emerging root doesn't get tangled, as happens when using fibrous paper towels. Pulling out germinated seeds from paper towels may be hazardous to their health.
Also, to insure a warm environment, here's something you could do in just about any indoor room: place the moist coffee filters, containing the pepper seeds, inside a glass baking pan. Place that on top of a germination mat. Cover the baking pan with plastic wrap to keep it warmer. I tried this at home, pepper seeds germinated with six days.
One method that was seconded by many: germinate your pepper seeds in between two moist paper towels in a room that is between 70 and 80 degrees. For many, that room might be the kitchen or bathroom. When the "tails" appear after about 6 or 7 days (the tails, by the way, are the emerging roots), gently transplant them into a moist, seed starting mix, preferably one that uses the more neutral coir instead of the lower pH peat moss. Or, make your own. My preferred home mix consists of equal parts coir, perlite and fine compost.
The improvements I would make to that germination suggestion? Use coffee filters instead of paper towels. That way, the emerging root doesn't get tangled, as happens when using fibrous paper towels. Pulling out germinated seeds from paper towels may be hazardous to their health.
Also, to insure a warm environment, here's something you could do in just about any indoor room: place the moist coffee filters, containing the pepper seeds, inside a glass baking pan. Place that on top of a germination mat. Cover the baking pan with plastic wrap to keep it warmer. I tried this at home, pepper seeds germinated with six days.
I have an ongoing issue with all my peppers: I get fruit and it looks nice, but the flesh is very thin. The plants look healthy and I use organic fertilizer (GB Stone Tomato and vegetable) but the pods are just thin shells. What to do?
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