According to what can be found on the web, bell peppers are notorious for being in the dirty dozen having been treated with insecticides, herbicides, whatever. I also question what you get for "organic" given we have to trust that they are what they say they are.
Having grown bell peppers for most of my adult life, why you need to use these chemicals is beyond me. A raw uncooked red bell pepper has twice if not more Vitamin C then an orange and has all kinds of other nutritional and health benefits. I have one a day, if the alleged organic ones are available, most times they are. Ones from Israel late last fall were about as good as the ones I grow.
I don't like chemicals, was poisoned with some noxious insecticide used for flies in one of our barns in the late 60's. It just about killed me, I was very young but remember being in the hospital. No idea what it was, just that it will kill a person if absorbed through the skin.
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Today's Featured Article - Third Brush Generators - by Chris Pratt. While I love straightening sheet metal, cleaning, and painting old tractors, I use every excuse to avoid working on the on the electrics. I find the whole process sheer mystery. I have picked up and attempted to read every auto and farm electrics book with no improvement in the situation. They all seem to start with a chapter entitled "Theory of Electricity". After a few paragraphs I usually close the book and go back to banging out dents. A good friend and I were recently discussing our tractor electrical systems when he stated "I figure it all comes back to applying Ohms Law". At this point
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