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Old 05-10-2004, 03:08 AM
David D.
 
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Default Dripping Dieffenbachia

I have propagated and given away giant-leaf dieffenbachia (18" leaves) for
years. I keep my plants in the house year round.

In my house, they grow a single trunk until they reach the ceiling. I cut
them down and cut up the trunk, root the top and the trunk pieces, and the
original bottom still in the soil grows another single-trunk plant.

A friend who has one of my dumb cane progeny left it outside for the summer,
and just brought it in for the Fall. She called to say that it now has
beads of moisture around the edges of the leaves. That has never happened
in my own house. She also said that it has four new baby stalks shooting
up from the base, That is also something that I have never encountered.

What is going on. Too much moisture? Too much summer sun? Are the
drips safe, or are they severe irritants like the sap?

- David



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Old 05-10-2004, 02:41 PM
Doug Kanter
 
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Quite a few of my tropical houseplants have drops of water at the leaf
edges, although I usually see it in the morning. Generally speaking, it's
the by-product of transpiration - what plants do at night in the absence of
light. I doubt your friend's dieffenbachia are producing calcium oxalate in
those drops of water. Why yours don't do it, I have no idea. But, the fact
that there are new stalks would indicate that the plant is nice & healthy.

By the way, the calcium oxalate in the stalks is the same stuff that's in
some of the leafy greens we eat, like swiss chard, but in a much higher
concentration. Sometimes, pets (especially stupid ones, like dogs) will chew
on dieffenbachia leaves and the juice will numb their throats and make them
drool for awhile, but it's pretty much harmless. You can get a hint of this
effect by eating swiss chard that's been grown in overly hot weather.

Incidentally, this is the reason for one of the plant's common names:
dumbcane - causing temporary speechlessness.

"David D." wrote in message
...
I have propagated and given away giant-leaf dieffenbachia (18" leaves) for
years. I keep my plants in the house year round.

In my house, they grow a single trunk until they reach the ceiling. I

cut
them down and cut up the trunk, root the top and the trunk pieces, and the
original bottom still in the soil grows another single-trunk plant.

A friend who has one of my dumb cane progeny left it outside for the

summer,
and just brought it in for the Fall. She called to say that it now has
beads of moisture around the edges of the leaves. That has never

happened
in my own house. She also said that it has four new baby stalks shooting
up from the base, That is also something that I have never encountered.

What is going on. Too much moisture? Too much summer sun? Are the
drips safe, or are they severe irritants like the sap?

- David





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Old 05-10-2004, 09:59 PM
Beecrofter
 
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Guttation
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Old 07-10-2004, 02:42 AM
simy1
 
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"David D." wrote in message ...
I have propagated and given away giant-leaf dieffenbachia (18" leaves) for
years. I keep my plants in the house year round.

In my house, they grow a single trunk until they reach the ceiling. I cut
them down and cut up the trunk, root the top and the trunk pieces, and the
original bottom still in the soil grows another single-trunk plant.

A friend who has one of my dumb cane progeny left it outside for the summer,
and just brought it in for the Fall. She called to say that it now has
beads of moisture around the edges of the leaves. That has never happened
in my own house. She also said that it has four new baby stalks shooting
up from the base, That is also something that I have never encountered.

What is going on. Too much moisture? Too much summer sun? Are the
drips safe, or are they severe irritants like the sap?

- David


your friend's dieffenbachia will probably rot and die. The same thing
happened to me. First year both of them were fine in the house and
growing vigorously, then the second summer I took to placing them
outside along with every other houseplant. For most plants it is very
good, but dumbcane picks up a virus or fungus that rots it starting
from the stem. It starts with those drops. Both died, one at the end
of the first summer and the other at the end of the second summer.

By then I had given out a few dumbcane babies to a friend, and those,
placed outside in the summer but only on a concrete patio (not under
trees like I do), had grown to be nice specimens with many shoots.
Eventually I took a couple of plants back, and they both died again.
One of them already had babies, and those two babies are still alive
and well. But I hope you are getting the drift.

The two plants I got the second time probably got it from the compost
I put in their pot after transplanting, because they started dying
well before I put them outside. It's a bug that is out there (at least
in Michigan) and dumbcane is sensitive to it. No other houseplant has
ever died on me except a couple I left out during a hard frost.
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Old 14-10-2004, 12:41 PM
SVTKate
 
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I read, many many years ago, the story of the Dumb Cane.
It went something like this.

The natives would feed an accused criminal some of the dumb cane and if he
could still tell his story through the affects of the plant then he was
telling the truth. If he could not tell his story then he was thrown off the
cliff.

Kate

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...
| Quite a few of my tropical houseplants have drops of water at the leaf
| edges, although I usually see it in the morning. Generally speaking, it's
| the by-product of transpiration - what plants do at night in the absence
of
| light. I doubt your friend's dieffenbachia are producing calcium oxalate
in
| those drops of water. Why yours don't do it, I have no idea. But, the fact
| that there are new stalks would indicate that the plant is nice & healthy.
|
| By the way, the calcium oxalate in the stalks is the same stuff that's in
| some of the leafy greens we eat, like swiss chard, but in a much higher
| concentration. Sometimes, pets (especially stupid ones, like dogs) will
chew
| on dieffenbachia leaves and the juice will numb their throats and make
them
| drool for awhile, but it's pretty much harmless. You can get a hint of
this
| effect by eating swiss chard that's been grown in overly hot weather.
|
| Incidentally, this is the reason for one of the plant's common names:
| dumbcane - causing temporary speechlessness.
|
| "David D." wrote in message
| ...
| I have propagated and given away giant-leaf dieffenbachia (18" leaves)
for
| years. I keep my plants in the house year round.
|
| In my house, they grow a single trunk until they reach the ceiling. I
| cut
| them down and cut up the trunk, root the top and the trunk pieces, and
the
| original bottom still in the soil grows another single-trunk plant.
|
| A friend who has one of my dumb cane progeny left it outside for the
| summer,
| and just brought it in for the Fall. She called to say that it now has
| beads of moisture around the edges of the leaves. That has never
| happened
| in my own house. She also said that it has four new baby stalks
shooting
| up from the base, That is also something that I have never
encountered.
|
| What is going on. Too much moisture? Too much summer sun? Are the
| drips safe, or are they severe irritants like the sap?
|
| - David
|
|
|
|
|


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