I had trimmed all of my pepper plants for winter storage and dormancy, however now finding your tutorial about propagation I think to myself wow I could have had a field full of pepper plants being the exact same as the ones I grew from seed. Conclusion is, the hell with seeds if you like the plants you grew and they worked in your growing conditions keep the same plants, propagate them!!!!!
I love your channel, Khang. Thanks to you, I have a small window garden now and I enjoy taking care of my plants. Soon, I will be moving to a house, so this hobby will get a boost. Thank you very much for your vids and a kind way of teaching us, newbies, how to do what we are meant to do as a species that was born in the canopies.
Great video Khang, cloning is so under utilized. Perfect way to speed up fruiting or duplicate plants. Cloning a mature plant makes a lot of sense. A clone of a 4 week old plant, makes a copy that is 4 weeks old. A clone of 20 week old plant makes a 20 week old copy that reaches fruiting sooner. I had a cucumber that was 9 weeks old, and the tip clone started producing cucumbers in only 23 days.
I recently cloned a Carolina Reaper with the method in this video. It took a while for it to produce roots, but now it’s flourishing thanks to you. Thank you Khang, your a true #GreenFingerPepperGod
@@twinchargedcivic7203 It doesn't regrow those leaves and then grow roots. The cutting goes straight to growing roots which is why any new plant growth should be cut away to discourage plant growth and encourage root growth. Once tge cutting has roots it can be fed, until then the cutting is living of itself which is why there is usually some yellowing of the cutting leaves. There's a balance, as with most things.
Khang, there is a up flow and down flow of nutrients inside the plant. The down flow takes nutrients from the leaves (synthesized by photosynthesis) to the roots. The up flow takes nutrients from the roots to the leaves. Leaving the leaves doesn't affect the rooting process since it's the down flow that matters, and the down flow doesn't produce leaves, only roots. There is no point in taking all the leaves to make the plant focus on rooting. If you cut all the leaves the rooting process is jeopardized and delayed because there is no more source of nutrients to sustain the down flow process. It still works though, I think because of all the nutrients that are still inside the stems. From the up flow perspective, since there is no roots, there is no source of nutrients. All we have is those already inside the stem. So it is wise to take out all the old and bad leaves to not lose nutrients on those. But leave all those who are in good shape. Don't lose those precious up flow nutrients inside the stem making new leaves, being that you already had them. My point is: Leave all the leaves that you can. Take only those from the bottom, old and bad ones. It will make the process faster.
Thanks, Peter! Yes, I've tested for the last 2 years and found that slightly older, larger stems rooted much faster and success rate is so much higher. The younger branches take a long time and not always successful.
Thank you so much for the video. Love all your video clips. I'm propagating as you said. I added nutrient from day one instead. So far so good. You are the reason I'm growing my Carolina Reaper with kratky method hydroponic planting. Cheers from Oz.
Thanks for sharing. I have never done this before. I usually plant my seeds. Yes, please add some info about the hydroponic solution and the system. Thank you.
If you half some of the bigger leafs it will tell the plant to put it's energy into the lower part of the plant (it may make it grow roots quicker). Great clones! Good video!
Very informative video, thanks for sharing. I did not realize branch size might play such an important role in success rate and length of time for roots. Very good to know.
Nice video you have inspired me to do some hydroponic growing. I love gardening but I recently moved to a apartment complex so I will have to do a indoor garden. I never done it but seen your videos and will try it now. Do you have any video how to start up hydroponic garden's? .
"We don't want to damage this root, so we'll just move it out of the w-" SNAP "Aw, $@*^$)!" Both this and the previous vid on this are great! I learned a lot, and actually went back and fixed what I started last week. I had way too much water, like I was rooting tomatoes, and too many leaves.
I have done lots of cloning but I still learned a lot more. Thank you 😊 I have to try this. My peppers didn’t grow well this year. Maybe they didn’t get enough water. Using the krackty method they will get all the water they need.
I love your videos. I have been watching for a few years, just finally subscribed. I come back time and time again to reference your videos. Thanks. Keep doing your thing 💪🌶🔥👍
I never found pepper plants that were created from rooted cuttings, to be even half as productive as fresh seed-grown pepper plants. They just don’t have a very impressive yield and so I prefer to start them from seed each time. Much bigger crops that way. If peppers are grown indoors, I never have to worry about cross pollination and I can collect true seed from the fruits.
Great video. Thanks for sharing this valuable information. Who would have thought about cuttings and pepper plants. We homestead in The Philippine Islands. God bless.
This is a video that I needed. My cat recently broke off one of the main stems that made a V on my Chiero Roxa which is the furthest along plant I have. I'm trying to save it at the moment but I'm not quite doing it this way. The leaves have been drooped for a few days now and it drops one once in a while. I'm hoping to see some good signs soon.
In propagating peppers, are there "nodes" to consider when cutting the branches? I will use your method to propagate my 2 year old Tabasco pepper. Tabasco pepper plants not always available in garden section of HD.
You can make an organic and clean rooting compound by pounding and leeching any willow tree branch then put a little bit of it in the water i use this same way but ijust stick them right into soil awesome video dude.
thank you for all your videos, they're really great. i'm certainly not been critical, as i was watching the cutting and inserting of the rock wool, i was wondering if it just might be a little easier if you used the aerogarden plugs, or similar
well i watched enough now, and i think i prefer the plants rether the original way, thanks for showing this its really stuff to think about it the way i want my own plants, greetz from the netherlands.
2 questions, can you put more than one cutting in a container or is it better to have only one. Second question. Can they be on the same light schedule as my other indoor plants or do they need more light? Thanks.
You should try taking cuttings from new growth it’s going to increase your success rates and dramatically decrease the amount of time it takes the cutting to root. And you can lightly scrape The portion of the stem which will be in the rooting solution Remove the outer layer of the stem and that will also decrease the Time it takes to root
You can try Rootone. Simply dip into the Rootone powder and wrap bottom of cutting in a wet paper towel or napkin. You keep napkin moist and it will grow much more roots within 10 days.
Khang, have you ever tried to grow mini tomatoes in your aerogarden? Or maybe strawberries? Since I have a Bounty Aerogarden, I'm thinking it might be interesting. If you've tried either of these, maybe you could make a video of it. Your videos are really good and very helpful! Thanks for all your support and instruction!
I propagated a pepper and it took forever to grow root and produce, seems like most of the summer. I think in most cases just starting a seed is better if possible.
Hi, Khang! Do the cuttings take on the lifespan of the parent? Or say if you take a cutting from a 3-yr old pepper plant, would the lifespan of the cutting be another 3 years?
Thank you for your wonderful information. I could listen to you all day. Here’s my question. You mentioned your hydroponic nutrient that you dropped in. In your wrapup information which one is the link for that hydroponic nutrient? Thanks again for your encouragement and guidance
hey there! your gardening channel is my go-to for tips and tricks. So I have a proper question for you. in your experience is there a way to identify pepper plants before they flower? I have bell, Serrano, banana and habanero peppers growing and I neglected to label them.
If you know the exact varieties and forgot labels, you can use some features to identify them. Post some pictures here and we will help you identify them. Habanero is very easy to identify. They grow very bushy, leaves are larger and sort of like a heart shape.
What I am trying and it seems to be working well is propagation in super saturated soil, make the roots a little stronger having resistance in the media 🤷
Hey khang love your vids could a person use stim-root rooting powder or gel to help speed up the rooting? Plmk stay safe and please know there are alot of us using your systems that you help us with. I myself am in Canada 🇨🇦.
Why don’t you propagate directly in the aerogarden I use a neoprene collar that I’ve drilled a hole in and split to the middle (like you can purchase for cloning). For smaller specimens I simply place a glass over them as a makeshift terrarium. I remove the glass after roots emerge
So once you have roots on your cuttings, could you transplant it from the water/nutrient mix to soil without any issues? Or would it be similar to taking a hydroponic plant to soil? I have some Lemon Starrburst cuttings that are rooting! 😁
@@KhangStarr That reply was crazy fast! So as long as I stick it somewhere outside where it only gets morning sun for now, it can stay outside? Really appreciate all you do for us beginners out there!
Kurt Piron the propagated will produce the same amt. of fruits unless there is another factor(like light, nutrients, etc) as the mother plant; however, it will produce earlier(compared to normal seed grown, even small ones)
Young shoots usually issue roots much faster. And use a pair of secateurs that is sharp and not kitchen scissors that are not sharp. Rooting media should be either rock wool cubes, floral foam, vermiculite or perlite. I have rooted literarly thousands of cuttings over the years, so think that I have some experience on the matter.
Kenneth, I agree that the new soft growth, roots nicely, but you need to understand that there is never only one way to grow plants....and your way is not the only way. Some people just want to have fun and they could care less whether they are using kitchen scissors or proper “secateurs”. You care...but some don’t. Obviously the proof is in the pudding because Khang rooted a hard woody stem and he used kitchen scissors. I likely have more experience than even yourself, but I don’t tell other people what to do with their plants and come off like I know best. I think people should do whatever they want. There’s an old saying...”all gardeners know better than other gardeners” but the best gardening advice I ever received was “stop listening to other gardeners”. Trial and error are the best garden teachers of all....not know-it-alls who insist their way is the only way. Good grief.
The Hollyberry Lady With your knowledge, can you tell me how deep should i plant my rooted cutting because the roots are growing really low? Will it rot if i plant it in the pot so that about 3cm above the roots are also covered?
@@thehollyberrylady7764 I heard this idea when I learned teaching. This is the worst I got. Of course, you learn better by yourself, but not using knowledge of others is nonsense! Go back to a cave and do all the job of millions during a thousand years! Of course this guy is right by telling using sharp cissors. What's your problem with?
Hi Kang , I have a chilli plant that I over wintered 3 times and the fruit productivity is very low now. If I clone it will the cuttings produce fruits like it did when it was young or is the DNA too damaged or something like that? Thanks in advance!
@Khangstarr , first I really like your channel. Question: I have tried to propagate a Kaffir Lime many times with zero success. I have had success with many peppers, ficus and maple. Do you have any experience with Kaffir. My wife cooks with it and we would love to have more of them. I have a single tree that we have had 9-10 yrs. we bought it in an Asian street market from a Thai lady who really didn’t want to sell it but luckily she did. I have tried new growth, woody stems, in water and in soil.
By you! What kind of chili pepper is the most bushy, the biggest? I prepared a 20 liter can. Does my buddy talk, schotsch bonnet? Thank you to the king, I adore your video productions! Greetings from Croatia
Sir, but let say the pepper plant of mine already became wooden, for the pepper plants it's stem already became WOODEN, can I still chop the wooden stem off and root it?
hey khang i was just wondering what aero planter model you use and where to get the mix of hydro nutrients you use im pretty new to raising plants and just want some tips. i am very intersted in hydrponics growing for all types of plants
awseome awesome thank you so much this is exactly what i wanted to see today as i just topped my pepper plants and wanted to know if i could take them and propagate new plants
so after getting them growing in the little hydroponic system, you can move them out into traditional soil and they will transition well? Or are the plants addicted to hydroponics?
soil to hydroponics they do well, the other way around is like a culture shock for them in my experience. its possible just need gradually adjustments to soil.
High my American friend Johan here from South Africa want to start farming with Hot Peppers 1.) I want to buy Habineros from a Nursery I saw 18 Habanero plants about 20 cm high 10 inches one already got 5 fruit on and other 12 got flowers at 20 cm high they look a bit bushy but not much and I want to know why they already come out so early and so small plant? 2.) Then must I prune the other 12 plants flowers in the middle so it can make a big plant? Or must I only plant them out in bigger 9-inch pots with new compost? 3.) Then it is close to winter end of April can I take them in the house after they give their fruit and trim them and keep them where they get sun in the afternoon on the west side. Or must I give them light? Greetings Johan South Africa
@@charlesdobbs4570I can't imagine why you would have issues growing habs(hot pepper). What Hardiness Zone are you in? I'm 8b in NW Oregon...and my habs always "explode" with fruit in-ground and in pots. I struggle with Ghosts, Scorpions and Reapers(super-hot peppers) maybe because of the low-moderate humidity in my area. Just about everything else below the super-hots...I have no issues.
I had trimmed all of my pepper plants for winter storage and dormancy, however now finding your tutorial about propagation I think to myself wow I could have had a field full of pepper plants being the exact same as the ones I grew from seed. Conclusion is, the hell with seeds if you like the plants you grew and they worked in your growing conditions keep the same plants, propagate them!!!!!
One of the best tutorials. Your voice and personality are perfect for tutorials. Love your energy!
I love your channel, Khang. Thanks to you, I have a small window garden now and I enjoy taking care of my plants. Soon, I will be moving to a house, so this hobby will get a boost. Thank you very much for your vids and a kind way of teaching us, newbies, how to do what we are meant to do as a species that was born in the canopies.
Great video Khang, cloning is so under utilized. Perfect way to speed up fruiting or duplicate plants. Cloning a mature plant makes a lot of sense. A clone of a 4 week old plant, makes a copy that is 4 weeks old. A clone of 20 week old plant makes a 20 week old copy that reaches fruiting sooner. I had a cucumber that was 9 weeks old, and the tip clone started producing cucumbers in only 23 days.
beautifully states my friend
I recently cloned a Carolina Reaper with the method in this video. It took a while for it to produce roots, but now it’s flourishing thanks to you. Thank you Khang, your a true #GreenFingerPepperGod
Give it root hormones for quicker results ;)
You turned me into such a pepper fanatic. Grew all from seed this year but after watching this video going to try propagate my prunings
I've never removed that much leaf material when cloning plants. I'll have to try your method out. Thanks!
Jeb Gardener I don't think it's a good idea. The plant has to regrow those leafs then generate energy to grow roots. This methods is longgg
Jeb Gardener omg I’m subscribed to you too! Btw I love your videos and how you make them 😁
I always remove every leaf
@@twinchargedcivic7203 It doesn't regrow those leaves and then grow roots. The cutting goes straight to growing roots which is why any new plant growth should be cut away to discourage plant growth and encourage root growth. Once tge cutting has roots it can be fed, until then the cutting is living of itself which is why there is usually some yellowing of the cutting leaves. There's a balance, as with most things.
i was thinking the same too. Cutting dont have enough root to gain nutrient from the soil, so most of it must come from the leaves.
Khang, there is a up flow and down flow of nutrients inside the plant. The down flow takes nutrients from the leaves (synthesized by photosynthesis) to the roots. The up flow takes nutrients from the roots to the leaves.
Leaving the leaves doesn't affect the rooting process since it's the down flow that matters, and the down flow doesn't produce leaves, only roots. There is no point in taking all the leaves to make the plant focus on rooting. If you cut all the leaves the rooting process is jeopardized and delayed because there is no more source of nutrients to sustain the down flow process. It still works though, I think because of all the nutrients that are still inside the stems.
From the up flow perspective, since there is no roots, there is no source of nutrients. All we have is those already inside the stem. So it is wise to take out all the old and bad leaves to not lose nutrients on those. But leave all those who are in good shape. Don't lose those precious up flow nutrients inside the stem making new leaves, being that you already had them.
My point is: Leave all the leaves that you can. Take only those from the bottom, old and bad ones. It will make the process faster.
I disagree, i find that if you leave leaves on it dries out the plant really fast. The stem only needs a leaf and a half to photosynthesise..
Caley, yes, too much leaf area means too much transpiration. Some pros even cut the bigger leaves in half! Seems crazy to me but...
Love your videos. Clear explantations, friendly tone, made me try a lot of things at home. 👍
Plopped
Nice video Khang. That was very impressive root growth. I didn't realize the thicker stems did so well. I'll try that with some of my plants.
Thanks, Peter! Yes, I've tested for the last 2 years and found that slightly older, larger stems rooted much faster and success rate is so much higher. The younger branches take a long time and not always successful.
Awesome! I love the idea of propegating plants, especially for continuing favorites indoors after the normal season to "save" your favorites :)
Thank you so much for the video. Love all your video clips. I'm propagating as you said. I added nutrient from day one instead. So far so good. You are the reason I'm growing my Carolina Reaper with kratky method hydroponic planting. Cheers from Oz.
Thanks for sharing. I have never done this before. I usually plant my seeds. Yes, please add some info about the hydroponic solution and the system. Thank you.
If you half some of the bigger leafs it will tell the plant to put it's energy into the lower part of the plant (it may make it grow roots quicker). Great clones! Good video!
It looks like leaving some leaves allows the branch to focus on making roots, while those without leaves are busy making shoots.
That pepper plant is beautiful.
this is my method ,i also have a aerogarden .i just cut the plant and straight in a aerogarden and not a water bottle ,faster and massive roots
In Asian market the pepper leaves are so expensive,other people never know that the pepper leaves are delicious with chicken ginger soup.yummy
which kind of pepper leaves, i mean what sort? Example Carolina Reaper
Very informative video, thanks for sharing. I did not realize branch size might play such an important role in success rate and length of time for roots. Very good to know.
Nice video you have inspired me to do some hydroponic growing. I love gardening but I recently moved to a apartment complex so I will have to do a indoor garden. I never done it but seen your videos and will try it now. Do you have any video how to start up hydroponic garden's? .
great video! I like the idea of the propagation in the Aerogarden, I have a few of them myself and I'll definitely try this too.
"We don't want to damage this root, so we'll just move it out of the w-" SNAP "Aw, $@*^$)!"
Both this and the previous vid on this are great! I learned a lot, and actually went back and fixed what I started last week. I had way too much water, like I was rooting tomatoes, and too many leaves.
great I am thinking of propogating roses using the same method
I have done lots of cloning but I still learned a lot more. Thank you 😊 I have to try this. My peppers didn’t grow well this year. Maybe they didn’t get enough water. Using the krackty method they will get all the water they need.
I love your videos. I have been watching for a few years, just finally subscribed. I come back time and time again to reference your videos. Thanks. Keep doing your thing 💪🌶🔥👍
Very good video. I was not aware I could propagate my peppers! Going out to cut some now! Thank you!
I never found pepper plants that were created from rooted cuttings, to be even half as productive as fresh seed-grown pepper plants. They just don’t have a very impressive yield and so I prefer to start them from seed each time. Much bigger crops that way. If peppers are grown indoors, I never have to worry about cross pollination and I can collect true seed from the fruits.
you should look up a clone machine they work great for this. sometimes depending on the cutting you can get dreads in 1-2 weeks.
Great video. Thanks for sharing this valuable information. Who would have thought about cuttings and pepper plants. We homestead in The Philippine Islands. God bless.
How long does it take for the cloned plant to start fruiting?
This is a video that I needed.
My cat recently broke off one of the main stems that made a V on my Chiero Roxa which is the furthest along plant I have. I'm trying to save it at the moment but I'm not quite doing it this way.
The leaves have been drooped for a few days now and it drops one once in a while. I'm hoping to see some good signs soon.
I call the V you spoke of as...The Crotch!😁
In propagating peppers, are there "nodes" to consider when cutting the branches? I will use your method to propagate my 2 year old Tabasco pepper. Tabasco pepper plants not always available in garden section of HD.
You can make an organic and clean rooting compound by pounding and leeching any willow tree branch then put a little bit of it in the water i use this same way but ijust stick them right into soil awesome video dude.
Awesome video. peppers cultivation from cuttings.
Great video Khang, I love pepper so this is going to be my project soon. Just wondering if you can grow lemon with hydroponics system.
thank you for all your videos, they're really great. i'm certainly not been critical, as i was watching the cutting and inserting of the rock wool, i was wondering if it just might be a little easier if you used the aerogarden plugs, or similar
great videos. thank you for sharing. learned lots and put it into action. very relaxing to watch as well.
Thank you. I'm trying this out with a ghost pepper and a whiskey glass.
well i watched enough now, and i think i prefer the plants rether the original way, thanks for showing this its really stuff to think about it the way i want my own plants, greetz from the netherlands.
2 questions, can you put more than one cutting in a container or is it better to have only one. Second question. Can they be on the same light schedule as my other indoor plants or do they need more light? Thanks.
Great video. Thank you for showing me how to propegate pepper plants.
You should try taking cuttings from new growth it’s going to increase your success rates and dramatically decrease the amount of time it takes the cutting to root. And you can lightly scrape The portion of the stem which will be in the rooting solution Remove the outer layer of the stem and that will also decrease the Time it takes to root
Thank you, I have been interested in starting from cuttings, now I will give it a try
You can try Rootone. Simply dip into the Rootone powder and wrap bottom of cutting in a wet paper towel or napkin. You keep napkin moist and it will grow much more roots within 10 days.
I finally got it to work. made cuttings from my stems that got frost bite.
Excellent tutorial Khang! I'm curious, how mature was the plant that you took the cuttings from? Thx
The mother plant was 4 months old.
Wonderful video, thank you Khang, as always, for sharing your knowledge and experience.
You are....the Professor of Peppers 😎😎😎. Bless up!!!
Many thanks for your great videos. This is my second year for growing chillis and i learned so much from you. Great and good growing wishes.
first one! love your vids khang Starr keep up the great work!!! PS. I bought a grow tent after I was inspired by you!
Khang, have you ever tried to grow mini tomatoes in your aerogarden? Or maybe strawberries? Since I have a Bounty Aerogarden, I'm thinking it might be interesting. If you've tried either of these, maybe you could make a video of it. Your videos are really good and very helpful! Thanks for all your support and instruction!
You have a great channel. You are very talented. Thank you for sharing.
Add air stone and airpump and you will cut down the time it takes to root.
I propagated a pepper and it took forever to grow root and produce, seems like most of the summer. I think in most cases just starting a seed is better if possible.
I know this is a bit old, and you are using hydroponics, but can you go over how amd when you can plant the cutting in soil after rooting.
Hi, Khang! Do the cuttings take on the lifespan of the parent? Or say if you take a cutting from a 3-yr old pepper plant, would the lifespan of the cutting be another 3 years?
IT takes on the age of the parent, so it should fruit very fast.
Great timing, I was just thinking about this 😊❤️
Thank you for your wonderful information. I could listen to you all day. Here’s my question. You mentioned your hydroponic nutrient that you dropped in. In your wrapup information which one is the link for that hydroponic nutrient? Thanks again for your encouragement and guidance
Link is in the description labeled as Aerogarden Nutrients
hey there! your gardening channel is my go-to for tips and tricks. So I have a proper question for you. in your experience is there a way to identify pepper plants before they flower? I have bell, Serrano, banana and habanero peppers growing and I neglected to label them.
If you know the exact varieties and forgot labels, you can use some features to identify them. Post some pictures here and we will help you identify them. Habanero is very easy to identify. They grow very bushy, leaves are larger and sort of like a heart shape.
What I am trying and it seems to be working well is propagation in super saturated soil, make the roots a little stronger having resistance in the media 🤷
Nice video thank you posting. The coaster thing is a beer cozy or in his case a pepper cozy
Awesome & amazing video on propagating !
Hey khang love your vids could a person use stim-root rooting powder or gel to help speed up the rooting? Plmk stay safe and please know there are alot of us using your systems that you help us with. I myself am in Canada 🇨🇦.
Learning so much from your channel. Thank you!
Diane Graves Me too.
Why don’t you propagate directly in the aerogarden I use a neoprene collar that I’ve drilled a hole in and split to the middle (like you can purchase for cloning). For smaller specimens I simply place a glass over them as a makeshift terrarium. I remove the glass after roots emerge
So once you have roots on your cuttings, could you transplant it from the water/nutrient mix to soil without any issues? Or would it be similar to taking a hydroponic plant to soil?
I have some Lemon Starrburst cuttings that are rooting! 😁
You can plant it in soil. Just make sure the soil is soft and moist. Also, keep it out of direct sun for about a week, just give it morning sun.
@@KhangStarr That reply was crazy fast!
So as long as I stick it somewhere outside where it only gets morning sun for now, it can stay outside?
Really appreciate all you do for us beginners out there!
i take clones and put them into a plastic container with an airstone, after a week they usually have crazy root growth then I plant them
diggs what type of airstone? Like the kind you use for a fish tank?
Boy i did not know peppers can grow that much!
How much can the plant live
?
Do you notice a difference in the amount of fruits produced between propagated and seed grown chilli plants?
Kurt Piron the propagated will produce the same amt. of fruits unless there is another factor(like light, nutrients, etc) as the mother plant; however, it will produce earlier(compared to normal seed grown, even small ones)
Young shoots usually issue roots much faster. And use a pair of secateurs that is sharp and not kitchen scissors that are not sharp. Rooting media should be either rock wool cubes, floral foam, vermiculite or perlite. I have rooted literarly thousands of cuttings over the years, so think that I have some experience on the matter.
Kenneth, I agree that the new soft growth, roots nicely, but you need to understand that there is never only one way to grow plants....and your way is not the only way. Some people just want to have fun and they could care less whether they are using kitchen scissors or proper “secateurs”. You care...but some don’t. Obviously the proof is in the pudding because Khang rooted a hard woody stem and he used kitchen scissors. I likely have more experience than even yourself, but I don’t tell other people what to do with their plants and come off like I know best. I think people should do whatever they want. There’s an old saying...”all gardeners know better than other gardeners” but the best gardening advice I ever received was “stop listening to other gardeners”. Trial and error are the best garden teachers of all....not know-it-alls who insist their way is the only way. Good grief.
The Hollyberry Lady
With your knowledge, can you tell me how deep should i plant my rooted cutting because the roots are growing really low? Will it rot if i plant it in the pot so that about 3cm above the roots are also covered?
as far as I know, the rot will not be an issue. From the leaf nodes peppers can grow roots.
@@thehollyberrylady7764 I heard this idea when I learned teaching. This is the worst I got. Of course, you learn better by yourself, but not using knowledge of others is nonsense! Go back to a cave and do all the job of millions during a thousand years! Of course this guy is right by telling using sharp cissors. What's your problem with?
Hi Kang , I have a chilli plant that I over wintered 3 times and the fruit productivity is very low now. If I clone it will the cuttings produce fruits like it did when it was young or is the DNA too damaged or something like that?
Thanks in advance!
Very good going....pls specify the fertilizers whenever u use it...thanks
@Khangstarr , first I really like your channel. Question: I have tried to propagate a Kaffir Lime many times with zero success. I have had success with many peppers, ficus and maple. Do you have any experience with Kaffir. My wife cooks with it and we would love to have more of them. I have a single tree that we have had 9-10 yrs. we bought it in an Asian street market from a Thai lady who really didn’t want to sell it but luckily she did. I have tried new growth, woody stems, in water and in soil.
Greetting from Costa Rica, thank you for sharing this information!!!
By you! What kind of chili pepper is the most bushy, the biggest? I prepared a 20 liter can. Does my buddy talk, schotsch bonnet? Thank you to the king, I adore your video productions! Greetings from Croatia
have you got them cuttings to produce peppers yet? thank you for the video
Do you just leave them by the window?
Got that ASMR from cutting that rockwool 😎
Sir, but let say the pepper plant of mine already became wooden, for the pepper plants it's stem already became WOODEN, can I still chop the wooden stem off and root it?
hey khang i was just wondering what aero planter model you use and where to get the mix of hydro nutrients you use im pretty new to raising plants and just want some tips. i am very intersted in hydrponics growing for all types of plants
This is the Bounty. There's a sale right now, and if you use our community code, you saved some money. Here's the code "PepperLovers20".
Thank-you. , may I know how many watts of Led lights you are using for this propagation ? And how many hours on and off.
?
awseome awesome thank you so much this is exactly what i wanted to see today as i just topped my pepper plants and wanted to know if i could take them and propagate new plants
Hi Can you explain about hydroponic solutions thanks
Great job
Where can I get the system you have ?
so after getting them growing in the little hydroponic system, you can move them out into traditional soil and they will transition well? Or are the plants addicted to hydroponics?
soil to hydroponics they do well, the other way around is like a culture shock for them in my experience. its possible just need gradually adjustments to soil.
Addicted to hydroponics ha,ha
Thank you!
High my American friend Johan here from South Africa want to start farming with Hot Peppers
1.) I want to buy Habineros from a Nursery I saw 18 Habanero plants about 20 cm high 10 inches one already got 5 fruit on and other 12 got flowers at 20 cm high they look a bit bushy but not much and I want to know why they already come out so early and so small plant?
2.) Then must I prune the other 12 plants flowers in the middle so it can make a big plant? Or must I only plant them out in bigger 9-inch pots with new compost?
3.) Then it is close to winter end of April can I take them in the house after they give their fruit and trim them and keep them where they get sun in the afternoon on the west side. Or must I give them light? Greetings Johan South Africa
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That was so cool
Great video. What type of soil do you use when transplanting to outdoors
Here's the transplant video of the parent plant ua-cam.com/video/K5EhvvWz-0c/v-deo.html
Really enjoyed this.
Is propagation the same as cloning
Good video khang how often do you change the water
I have that same aerogarden. Do you think I'll be able to fit 2 habanero plants in there or should I stick to one?
I grew a beautiful plant the pepper I have is 2 ft tall. They have flowers but no fruit. What can I do? Or did I do something wrong?
Do you change your solutions waters? What I been reading that the solution water need to be change 14-20 days.. hope you can clarify this, thanks
Yes, it's a good idea to change it 14-20 days, or when you see sings of algae.
That's awesome.. I might to do that with some favorites this season..
You could skip the water bottle stage. Place your cuts directly into your Cloner with rooting hormone.
Hey Khang, great job. What is your lighting? for example, I use a light also but haven't tried this technique as of yet.
In the video, I used LED from AeroGarden Bounty.
Did you build that container and light stand?
Awesome I’m looking forward to trying to cross cayenne and habanero
I’m gonna call it cayennero
I have started some habanero seeds. And they are sad looking. My other peppers are looking OK. Is there a trick to growing Habaneros? Tnx.
@@charlesdobbs4570I can't imagine why you would have issues growing habs(hot pepper). What Hardiness Zone are you in? I'm 8b in NW Oregon...and my habs always "explode" with fruit in-ground and in pots. I struggle with Ghosts, Scorpions and Reapers(super-hot peppers) maybe because of the low-moderate humidity in my area. Just about everything else below the super-hots...I have no issues.
Love!
Hi Khang could you let me know exact hydroponics solution? Thank you.