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#1
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Windburn to leaves :(
Hi Everyone,
I purchased a Phyllostachys aurea a week ago which I have planted in a large container. The last couple of days we have had severe winds where I live,and although i tried my best to protect my bamboo from the wind it has suffered windburn.A lot of the leaves are curled up,drooping and dry looking - its looking a bit sorry for itself Is there anything I can do to help it recover - or will the leaves die and drop off anyway? Thanks in advance for any advise |
#2
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Windburn to leaves :(
"Moonflower" wrote in message
s.com... Hi Everyone, I purchased a Phyllostachys aurea a week ago which I have planted in a large container. The last couple of days we have had severe winds where I live,and although i tried my best to protect my bamboo from the wind it has suffered windburn.A lot of the leaves are curled up,drooping and dry looking - its looking a bit sorry for itself Is there anything I can do to help it recover - or will the leaves die and drop off anyway? Thanks in advance for any advise -- Moonflower One indication that a plant is not getting enough water is the leaves will roll up. I planted a 1 gal. Phyllostachys aureosulcata aureocaulis a couple of months ago in our back yard (zone 5). We live in a new development, with no windbreaks. It very often gets quite windy here too. The first 2-3 weeks, I watered the plant at least twice a day with a 2.5 gal bucket. I now water it deeply once a day. It is surving the wind just fine, even growing new leaves. I had been told that until the plant gets astablished, it needs a lot of water, but not to the point of it waterlogging the plant, i.e. poor draining soil. HTH -- SamMan Rip it to reply |
#3
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Windburn to leaves :(
The other poster may well be right. Water lots. It's a little unusual to
have substantial wind burn without cold weather. The leaves you described will likely die, but don't cut the culm. It may releaf this year or even next year. If there are no leaves and watering doesn't help, you may have lost the plant. The only people I have known who lost bamboo plants lost them in the first year due to underwatering. ---------- Bob Moonflower wrote in message s.com... Hi Everyone, I purchased a Phyllostachys aurea a week ago which I have planted in a large container. The last couple of days we have had severe winds where I live,and although i tried my best to protect my bamboo from the wind it has suffered windburn.A lot of the leaves are curled up,drooping and dry looking - its looking a bit sorry for itself Is there anything I can do to help it recover - or will the leaves die and drop off anyway? Thanks in advance for any advise -- Moonflower ------------------------------------------------------------------------ posted via www.GardenBanter.co.uk |
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