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solaara 12-10-2009 09:44 PM

twisted willow
 
I have a dwarf twisted willow, which I got this year..I put it in a tub with multipurpose compost..The leaves keep renewing themselves, then drying up and falling off..Am I doing something wrong..?

Jonathan[_3_] 13-10-2009 08:50 AM

twisted willow
 
On 12 Oct, 21:44, solaara wrote:
I have a dwarf twisted willow, which I got this year..I put it in a tub
with multipurpose compost..The leaves keep renewing themselves, then
drying up and falling off..Am I doing something wrong..?

--
solaara


Sounds like it's getting too dry. Willows need a lot of water. the tub
may be a mistake.

Jonathan

Spider[_2_] 13-10-2009 01:50 PM

twisted willow
 

"Jonathan" wrote in message
...
On 12 Oct, 21:44, solaara wrote:
I have a dwarf twisted willow, which I got this year..I put it in a tub
with multipurpose compost..The leaves keep renewing themselves, then
drying up and falling off..Am I doing something wrong..?

--
solaara


Sounds like it's getting too dry. Willows need a lot of water. the tub
may be a mistake.

Jonathan



Yes, I generally agree with that. However, because it's a dwarf form, it
may cope with the pot provided you keep up with the watering. However, bear
in mind that it will lose its leaves about now anyway, so you will no longer
have that 'dehydration barometer'.

Spider



solaara 13-10-2009 08:08 PM





Thanks for your tips..I will keep up with the watering!!!!!!

beccabunga 14-10-2009 01:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by solaara (Post 866934)
I have a dwarf twisted willow, which I got this year..I put it in a tub with multipurpose compost..The leaves keep renewing themselves, then drying up and falling off..Am I doing something wrong..?

Looking at the description, "dwarf" is a highly relative term since this can grow to over 20 feet high, not that far off the "normal" form. Unless you keep it well pruned, it will not stay dwarf for a long time, and like all willows will need plenty of water.

I am always a bit suspicious of trees sold as "dwarf" forms. Many become monsters if you turn your back - particularly those sold as suitable for troughs or rock gardens.


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