Guest guest Posted April 18, 2006 Report Share Posted April 18, 2006 The coast is not ideal for peppers, tomatoes, melons, etc....understatement of the year, huh? Do you know where in CO you are moving? You should be able to look up your zone in Western Garden Book or some other source and see what will grow. Allow for altitude too. I am not sure how your latitude will change, but that affects growing hours also. Locsal nurseries will usually be able to tell you what grows well and what is considered a "tender annual" - in other words, it won't grow well at all. Gayla Always Enough RanchAcampo, Californiahttp://bouncinghoofs.com/alwaysenough.htmlA day without Bill Barnhill is like a day without sunshine!aeranch@... ----- Original Message ----- From: health Sent: Tuesday, April 18, 2006 12:18 PM Subject: Re: now hot peppers That'd be great!! When we get our own place there, I plan on finding out if I can grow peppers there. Tried it here, but with no success. I need to start researching what I can grow there. And once I get my own computer hooked up, I'll be finding all the info I saved on mini gardens, terrace gardens, flowerpot gardens, stuff like that. Gayla <aeranch@...> wrote: if you don't have time or a place in Colorado to get in a garden, I can send you some habs if they grow for me this year. You could soak them in ACV, then dehydrate the ACV. I imagine the results would be impressive. I am going to make my own ACV again this year with the Fuji apples from a neighbor. It won't be ready for this year's crop of peppers, but for next year, my jars and bottles will be smokin'! Gayla Talk is cheap. Use Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls. Great rates starting at 1¢/min. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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