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I feel like I'm missing something. They look pretty close to each other except for the sodium after you account for the difference in serving size. So the one's a little saltier than the other. :smoking:
The one on the right doesn't appear to have magnesium or zinc or vitamin B6 ??
 
Container growing at it's finest . Never grew peppers before they seem to like the leftover nutrients !! :biggrin:View attachment 763446 View attachment 763447

Nice, here's some sweet bell peppers I grew last year..They also like their calcium or else the dreaded blossom end rot..Also, if you pinch those blooms off now,you'll be happy you did later.


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Nice, here's some sweet bell peppers I grew last year..They also like their calcium or else the dreaded blossom end rot..Also, if you pinch those blooms off now,you'll be happy you did later.


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Thank you sir . I saw that earlier from some boys that were growing jalapeno's and didn't think it applied to bell's but I will do so today .:thumbsup:
 


Hell yeah!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Nice, here's some sweet bell peppers I grew last year..They also like their calcium or else the dreaded blossom end rot..Also, if you pinch those blooms off now,you'll be happy you did later.


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Glad you mentioned this!! I started my peppers inside but a week earlier than last year and they started flowering indoors in their tiny little jiffy pots, so I'm gonna go out and pinch them now.. Should I also do that to the zucchini, squash and cucumbers??
 
Hell yeah!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



Glad you mentioned this!! I started my peppers inside but a week earlier than last year and they started flowering indoors in their tiny little jiffy pots, so I'm gonna go out and pinch them now.. Should I also do that to the zucchini, squash and cucumbers??

Well with zucchini they first produce male flowers which are edible but some need to be left on to successfully pollinate and for female flower ( which is what you're looking for ) development. Squash and cucumbers the same thing with zucchini..The male flowers with fall off on their own.
 
Should I also do that to the zucchini, squash and cucumbers??

Probably jinx myself by saying this, but I've decided that zucchini is pretty much fool proof (around the CO plains area, at least). Every year I get a semi-decent looking plant from the big box store, it looks bad for a week after transplanting into my little bird bath garden, then it comes back and next thing I know there's squash the size of baseball bats if I don't find and harvest 'em small. :smoking:

This years starting to do it's thing between the tomato plants (another almost bulletproof one around here).
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