dying box
Hi there
A very novice gardener here. We recently redid our garden and I salvaged some lovely mature box to plant in pots. I did a really quick job in December, putting them in some cheap plastic pots with a bit of peat-free compost. This was a *really* quick job done in the middle of the night. I expected them to die as the pots were small and they fell over a couple of times, but they survived the winter in good health. I then transferred two of them to some nice zinc tapered planters from Homebase. These were much bigger. I put in some more peat-free compost and gave them a fairly savage pruning. For about 4 weeks they looked beautiful. Let's just say that now they are looking awful. I water them pretty often, probably twice a week. I hadn't realised just how badly they were doing till I compared them to the third box which I trimmed but left in its plastic pot. The one in the plastic pot is green and healthy. The two which I have transferred are brown, slightly dessicated and look very unwell. My great gardening triumph is turning to disaster before my eyes. Any thoughts? My first thought is that the metal planters are heating up the roots so they dry out. I know it's hot at the moment, but not that hot surely? The box are in part sun part shade. Probably in sun 50% of the day. Should I bin the zinc planters? I also wonder whether it is worth standing the planters in a dish to keep them wetter rather than letting excess water drain out? I added some top soil to raise the level of the earth in the container and to hopefully retain more moisture. Too soon to say if that has helped. Should I feed them? Any thoughts much appreciated. Daniel |
dying box
Hi Daniel
Snipped Let's just say that now they are looking awful. I water them pretty often, probably twice a week. I hadn't realised just how badly they were doing till I compared them to the third box which I trimmed but left in its plastic pot. The one in the plastic pot is green and healthy. The two which I have transferred are brown, slightly dessicated and look very unwell. My great gardening triumph is turning to disaster before my eyes. Any thoughts? Whilst box don't like to be in dry soil, are you sure they have sufficient drainage and aren't sitting in water? I'd be tempted to lift one of the plants and see if the roots are wet, and whether there is any root growth. You could also check that the roots have started to grow out into the surrounding compost, and not in a spiral as they may have been in their old pot. My first thought is that the metal planters are heating up the roots so they dry out. I know it's hot at the moment, but not that hot surely? The box are in part sun part shade. Probably in sun 50% of the day. Should I bin the zinc planters? I doubt very much that it's the planters heating up (I'm assuming that they are largish planters and not the small 5inch type zinc pots). Box don't mind sun or partial shade so I don't think that's the problem either. I also wonder whether it is worth standing the planters in a dish to keep them wetter rather than letting excess water drain out? I added some top soil to raise the level of the earth in the container and to hopefully retain more moisture. Too soon to say if that has helped. Should I feed them? Don't feed them - it sounds like they are stressed enough, feeding them will only make them worse. You could always take a few cuttings off the plant that is doing well. Take 4 inch cuttings, removing the bottom couple of pairs of leaves and push into a pot of soil or compost, and leave in the shade. Hope this helps. Regards Nick http://www.ukgardening.co.uk |
dying box
On 1 May, 16:57, "Nick Gray" wrote:
Hi Daniel Snipped Let's just say that now they are looking awful. I water them pretty often, probably twice a week. I hadn't realised just how badly they were doing till I compared them to the thirdboxwhich I trimmed but left in its plastic pot. The one in the plastic pot is green and healthy. The two which I have transferred are brown, slightly dessicated and look very unwell. My great gardening triumph is turning to disaster before my eyes. Any thoughts? Whilstboxdon't like to be in dry soil, are you sure they have sufficient drainage and aren't sitting in water? I'd be tempted to lift one of the plants and see if the roots are wet, and whether there is any root growth. You could also check that the roots have started to grow out into the surrounding compost, and not in a spiral as they may have been in their old pot. My first thought is that the metal planters are heating up the roots so they dry out. I know it's hot at the moment, but not that hot surely? Theboxare in part sun part shade. Probably in sun 50% of the day. Should I bin the zinc planters? I doubt very much that it's the planters heating up (I'm assuming that they are largish planters and not the small 5inch type zinc pots).Boxdon't mind sun or partial shade so I don't think that's the problem either. I also wonder whether it is worth standing the planters in a dish to keep them wetter rather than letting excess water drain out? I added some top soil to raise the level of the earth in the container and to hopefully retain more moisture. Too soon to say if that has helped. Should I feed them? Don't feed them - it sounds like they are stressed enough, feeding them will only make them worse. You could always take a few cuttings off the plant that is doing well. Take 4 inch cuttings, removing the bottom couple of pairs of leaves and push into a pot of soil or compost, and leave in the shade. Hope this helps. Regards Nickhttp://www.ukgardening.co.uk A blatant bump here. Anyone else got any thoughts to help out my poor desicated box? I guess I must have traumatised them by repotting and pruning them at the same time. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:52 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter