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Pepper - Emerald Giant
SKU:
PS31411A
CA$3.90
CA$3.90
Unavailable
per item
Approximately 120-180 seeds per gram.
Capsicum annuum
Lot# PS31411
The Emerald Giant Pepper was developed in 1963. It produces heavy yields of blocky thick walled dark green to red peppers that are 10-13 cm (4½-5”) long by 8-10 cm (3½-4”). Peppers are crisp and sweet. Plant height averages around 66-76 cm (26-30”) tall, but can achieve 91 cm (3’) under ideal growing conditions. These colorful tasty big peppers are perfect for eating raw, stuffing, roasting and grilling.
Capsicum annuum
Lot# PS31411
The Emerald Giant Pepper was developed in 1963. It produces heavy yields of blocky thick walled dark green to red peppers that are 10-13 cm (4½-5”) long by 8-10 cm (3½-4”). Peppers are crisp and sweet. Plant height averages around 66-76 cm (26-30”) tall, but can achieve 91 cm (3’) under ideal growing conditions. These colorful tasty big peppers are perfect for eating raw, stuffing, roasting and grilling.
Planting Instructions:
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Additional Information:
Emerald Giant pepper is a very large sweet pepper type. It is a fairly low maintenance plant and quite easy to grow, as long as a level of basic care is provided throughout the year. Use a good pair of scissors or snippers to cut the peppers from the bush. Picking them off usually will result in breaking off branches. To prolong a pepper harvest, cut peppers from the plant regularly. Peppers are susceptible to rot, blossom end rot, anthracnose, tobacco mosaic virus, bacterial spot, and mildew. Keep these in check and rotate pepper crops to different areas. Plant disease-resistant varieties. Keep the garden clean and free of weeds where pests and diseases can shelter. Destroy and dispose of infected plants before disease can spread. Aphids, cutworms, and flea beetles are common pests for most garden plants and there are a variety of techniques and solutions for these, including a mild soap spray and the use of a water stream to remove aphids. If cutworms are an issue, cut the tops and bottoms off of some plastic water bottles- then cut the remaining plastic tube into 3” pieces and place these 3” plastic circles around the bases off your seedlings, burying them at least 2” into the soil. Row covers work well to keep flea beetles from your plants if they are well secured to the ground. Pepper seeds can be dipped in a dilute hydrogen peroxide mix (1 tsp hydrogen peroxide per cup water) for one minute to disinfect seeds prior to planting- this process helps get rid of any unwanted or potential bacterial or fungi that may be hitch hiking on your seeds. If your soil or seed sprouting setup is susceptible to mold growth this can be useful to kill mold spores. |