Botanical bad smell problem.
Thanks for all the help, people. We've now found the problem. It was a
spider plant that was very high up in the conservatory, and which the wife
had been watering with a lance. She could never actually see the soil. It
turned out to be completely waterlogged and when I tried to get it down from
the shelf it spilled on me. Instant un-scheduled bath time. It's quite
unbelievable the stench it made.
Thanks again for all the input.
Duncan Adams.
"Duncan Adams" wrote in message
...
Hi experts,
May I bounce a problem off you? My wife I live in the UK, and we have a
largish conservatory that is heavily stocked with a wide variety of
plants.
This conservatory is an important part of our lives - we eat breakfast in
there in a morning, and I read in there at night.
In the conservatory is a large (and very heavy) ornamental stone fountain.
We don't use it as a fountain - it makes a superb planter for our cacti
and
succulents. In fact, it has 'pride of place'. By the side of the
fountain
is a manhole cover, and beneath that is access to our drains. Naturally,
the manhole is kept air-tight so that drain smells do not enter the
conservatory.
Several days ago, I noticed a smell, exactly like drains. It was
strongest
in the vicinity of the manhole and the 'fountain' - naturally, I suspected
the manhole, and I did some work on it to make absolutely sure it was
airtight. If it wasn't before (and I believe it was), then it definitely
is
now. But the smell persists. I am completely sure it isn't my drains.
So
we have suspected the plants.
We have tried removing all of the plants, except for the fountain of cacti
and succulents (which is immovable), but that hasn't helped. So, by
elimination, it has to be in the fountain. But we can't pinpoint the
actual
culprit (pointing one's nose amongst cacti is hazardous, to say the
least).
I should add that being a fountain, the bowls we have planted have no
drainage in them, so we are sparing with the water. We have excavated
right
down to the bottom of the bowls, between cacti, and there is no trace of
excess water, and the soil smells as it should.
It is also significant (I think) that the smell is almost completely
absent
first thing in the morning (just before sunrise), and it is at its most
intense later in the day. I know that plants metabolise differently
during
the day and night cycles, so I now suspect this cyclicity of the smell is
further evidence of a botanical source.
Can anyone shed any light on this please? Perhaps point me at a likely
culprit amongst the cacti and succulents (we have many varieties)?
TIA
Duncan Adams
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