@MIgardener

MIgardener: Bring Your Pepper Plants Inside For Winter! Here’s How 🌶️ 🫑 #shorts #garden #gardening


18 Comments

  1. Thank you for the information. I have a few pepper plants that have been very protective, and I'd like to save. I would have done it wrong. Thisnisnwhy I love you channel.

  2. I did this last year and it works fantastic!! Thank you Luke, you have changed my garden & helped me GROW BIGGER than ever before 💚

  3. I find that my peppers and chili's fruit way more the second and third year, same with eggplant.

  4. Thank you for this. I had some major producers this year that I didn't want to part with.. It's a horrible feeling taking such healthy plants and throwing them on the burn pile when you've nurtured and cared for them for months!😫

  5. First time i did this was last winter. It was so great! So much less effort to get the pepoers growing. So much more harvest.

  6. How much coffee did you have this morning Luke? Lol.
    Great idea. I am doing this as well. I had such a wonderful pepper plants. I want to save them as well for next season. Thanks for sharing.
    ❌⭕️🙏🏽♥️ Judy

  7. Last fall I moved my potted peppers into a sunny window without pruning for winter. They were FULL of blooms and peppers. I picked the last peppers in February 2023. About half the leaves had fallen off so I severely pruned plants back. They started putting on new leaves in about April, and I moved them back outside after danger of frost. I was picking peppers in June. Lincoln Nebraska.

  8. Look at that dark healthy soil😍. I need to amend my bed so so badly. Can you cover hardening off the pepper plant come spring? Cause I had trouble with that this year. God bless!

  9. Thank you for acknowledging just how long these plants will have to remain inside in some climates. I want to try this (albeit I'm VERY hesitant about possibility of bringing pests indoors) but, in my zone, they'll be inside at least 6 months. I haven't heard that long a time period mentioned in the other overwintering videos I've watched so I worried somewhat.

  10. I’ve tried this before unsuccessfully (they all died). Wondering if let them dry out too much? They were in a 50 degree heated building with only indirect light from the windows, in south central Michigan.

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