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Dan Griffin 24-07-2010 02:54 PM

Dieffenbachia picta Camilla - Eek! Aaargh! Whoops.
 
Hello Everyone. This is my first visit to this site and so I may be posting in the wrong area. If this is the case, whoops. Please, I need some help.

According to the book, 'The House Plant Expert' by Dr DG Hessayon I have a Dieffenbachia picta Camilla and I have been following the care instructions contained within. I have had them (both plant and book) for about four months and the plant has been growing well until the last few days. All of a sudden the lower leaves are yellowing. They are not dry to the touch. Many of the leaves have about a millimetre of 'brown' and yellow on the tips.

It sits in a well-lit spot out of direct sunlight. It is never too cold nor too warm. I water it every week and a couple of months ago I began to feed it every three or four weeks (after repotting it on the day of purchase). It is in a 10" terracotta pot and currently stands at 10" high. As of yesterday I hadn't watered it for a few days.

Last night I dug into the soil at the side of the pot - down to about three inches - to check if it was waterlogged. It was very dry and so I gave it about a half-pint of water. The leaves are continuing to yellow rather quickly. Does anyone know if this plant can be saved? Am I doing something horrendously wrong?

Many thanks for your help

harry 24-07-2010 05:07 PM

Dieffenbachia picta Camilla - Eek! Aaargh! Whoops.
 
On 24 July, 14:54, Dan Griffin Dan.Griffin.
wrote:
Hello Everyone. *This is my first visit to this site and so I may be
posting in the wrong area. *If this is the case, whoops. *Please, I need
some help.

According to the book, 'The House Plant Expert' by Dr DG Hessayon I have
a Dieffenbachia picta Camilla and I have been following the care
instructions contained within. *I have had them (both plant and book)
for about four months and the plant has been growing well until the last
few days. *All of a sudden the lower leaves are yellowing. *They are not
dry to the touch. *Many of the leaves have about a millimetre of 'brown'
and yellow on the tips.

It sits in a well-lit spot out of direct sunlight. *It is never too cold
nor too warm. *I water it every week and a couple of months ago I began
to feed it every three or four weeks (after repotting it on the day of
purchase). *It is in a 10" terracotta pot and currently stands at 10"
high. *As of yesterday I hadn't watered it for a few days.

Last night I dug into the soil at the side of the pot - down to about
three inches - to check if it was waterlogged. *It was very dry and so I
gave it about a half-pint of water. *The leaves are continuing to yellow
rather quickly. *Does anyone know if this plant can be saved? *Am I
doing something horrendously wrong?

Many thanks for your help

--
Dan Griffin

Sounds like the Ph of your soil may be wrong for camillas.
Camillas like an acid soil, have you planted it in an acid pet &have
you been giving it the sequestering stuff? They are unable to gather
nutrients unless the soil is acid.

Bob Hobden 24-07-2010 06:32 PM

Dieffenbachia picta Camilla - Eek! Aaargh! Whoops.
 


"harry" wrote
Dan.Griffin. wrote:
Hello Everyone. This is my first visit to this site and so I may be
posting in the wrong area. If this is the case, whoops. Please, I need
some help.

According to the book, 'The House Plant Expert' by Dr DG Hessayon I have
a Dieffenbachia picta Camilla and I have been following the care
instructions contained within. I have had them (both plant and book)
for about four months and the plant has been growing well until the last
few days. All of a sudden the lower leaves are yellowing. They are not
dry to the touch. Many of the leaves have about a millimetre of 'brown'
and yellow on the tips.

It sits in a well-lit spot out of direct sunlight. It is never too cold
nor too warm. I water it every week and a couple of months ago I began
to feed it every three or four weeks (after repotting it on the day of
purchase). It is in a 10" terracotta pot and currently stands at 10"
high. As of yesterday I hadn't watered it for a few days.

Last night I dug into the soil at the side of the pot - down to about
three inches - to check if it was waterlogged. It was very dry and so I
gave it about a half-pint of water. The leaves are continuing to yellow
rather quickly. Does anyone know if this plant can be saved? Am I
doing something horrendously wrong?

Many thanks for your help

I think you have misread the post Harry, it's a Dumb Cane, a House Plant.
Not one I've ever grown so I can't help the original poster.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK


harry 25-07-2010 07:30 AM

Dieffenbachia picta Camilla - Eek! Aaargh! Whoops.
 
On 24 July, 23:13, Sacha wrote:
On 2010-07-24 17:07:27 +0100, harry said:

On 24 July, 14:54, Dan Griffin Dan.Griffin.
wrote:
Hello Everyone. *This is my first visit to this site and so I may be
posting in the wrong area. *If this is the case, whoops. *Please, I n

eed
some help.


According to the book, 'The House Plant Expert' by Dr DG Hessayon I have
a Dieffenbachia picta Camilla snipDan Griffin

Sounds like the Ph of your soil may be wrong for camillas.
Camillas like an acid soil, have you planted it in an acid pet &have
you been giving it the sequestering stuff? *They are unable to gather
nutrients unless the soil is acid.


There is no such thing as a 'Camilla'. *You think you're talking about
a Camellia while the OP is talking about a Dieffenbachia.
--
Sachawww.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon


I'm not into flowers that much :-(


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