November 23, 2024

26 thoughts on “VIDEO: Complete Tour Of All The Pepper Plants We are Growing

  1. Got to Migardener store today and met my favorite gardener and his family. Thank you to Luke and your family for taking the time to talk and take pics with me and my daughter when you were busy and needed to be somewhere else. She is very excited to get the carrot seeds in the ground when we get home! And any of you out there that have the chance to get to the store, GO! All of the staff is very friendly and very knowledgable. Thanks again!

  2. He must've lost his mom. Please quit with the rabies bull. That is media brainwashing. Americans believe every raccoon has rabies. It's pure ignorance. I'd catch him and take him to the vet because he's going to die but I feed feral cats AND raccoons. I am an animal lover though and wanted my kids to be too. I see you are not.

  3. I love how you do the “year of” themes. Such a good way to remember each growing season! My “year of” aren’t so exciting … the first year of the Japanese beetle, the year of the heat wave, the year of the cucumber beetle, the first year of the garden boxes.

  4. I over-wintered two Bhut Jolokia (Dark Orange Ghost), one Poblano (Ancho after they are dried/smoked) and a Tabasco plant and potted them up to biggers digs this spring. It's AMAZING how productive they are the second year! The heat wave we had made the fruit smaller but they just kept setting more.

  5. Love your content Luke. It is refreshing to see someone get as excited as I do about plants.

    Have you ever heard of or seen Hungarian Goat horn peppers? I was introduced to them as a pickled pepper that I have recently been putting on EVERYTHING. I am no stranger to locating seeds to odd varieties of plants but I cannot seem to locate the seeds of this variety to grow and pickle my own. Now I have seen a few varieties of "goat horn" peppers but they all seem to be a variety of cayenne. From the size and spice of these, I am guessing they might be a variety of hungarian wax pepper rather than a cayenne. Anyway, I have checked a few places for seeds and can't seem to find them. Love what you are doing and will be purchasing most of my seeds from your store this, well I guess actually next year (but I am already planning in my head haha).

    I will not rest until I find the elusive Hungarian Goat Horn pepper.

  6. absolutely love your channel, especially showing different varieties. i think one issue new gardeners have is that the seeds we get form the local stores, they sell seeds that are quite generic, and they do not deliver. bought a bell pepper mix, spent so much time babying them, and fertilizing.. i have picked about 2 peppers per plant this whole season. very very disappointing and discouraging. so thank you for inspiring us all and showing us what we could be growing if we choose the right variety.

  7. Do you have any info on growing the Chile guero also known as Caribe? I have a friend mailing me some and I want to germinate the seeds and grow some plants

  8. Hi Luke, thank you for all these informative videos! I was trying to get a peek at what you were growing between the pepper plants if anything. After watching the video about what you can grow between tomatoes, I thought my experiment this year would be trying to use all the space and diversify the garden. Peppers are one of those space-hogging plants, I put lettuce between them for now, but I'm not actually sure that was a good choice. If you or anyone else reading this has suggestions let me know!
    An aside, I have seen a few of your videos sharing your perspective on companion planting, which I didn't start looking into until I saw your "what you can intercrop with tomatoes" video. Did your perspective on the topic change over the years or are the concepts of intercropping and companion planting two different things? I'm just curious, I'm gardening in Michigan with not a lot of space (my yard is in town) but also not a lot of season lol, so anywhere I can get another crop in is good, so long as it doesn't push back when harvest comes. An aside, I'm new to gardening at this level, I'd say this is year 3 of trying things.

    Thanks for your help!

  9. First off, please do not broadcast about things you have no idea about, such as squirrels having rabies. They almost never have rabies and do not transmit it to humans. Secondly, that baby is a lot older than a week. Geeze. It's young to be out of its nest, mom is probably close by. and please NEVER EVER EVER feed SALTED nuts to wildlife! IF after watching it for a few hours mom doesnt show up to get it, then put it into a shoe box and contact your local wildlife rehabilitation expert. You can find one by going to your state's DNR site and looking for their list of rehabbers. I LOVE your gardening videos, but as a wildlife rehabber myself, this video has me SCREAMING at you and i'm only 1.:08 minutes in! PLEASE! Stick to what you know!

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