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Houseplant shrivelling
On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 08:23:00 -0000, Chris Hogg wrote:
On Tue, 3 Mar 2015 06:53:49 -0000, "Bob Hobden" wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote I have a houseplant which I moved into a larger pot (as it was consuming the water very rapidly, it had outgrown the small pot). As soon as I did this, the leaves have shrivelled up. AFAIK I'm not over or under watering it, and there are no signs of beasties. What's wrong with it? It would be helpful if we knew what the plant was, how long you have had it and it's size. and a picture. I don't know what it is, it was given to me a year ago, and has flourished in all that time and grown larger. Only changing pot made it do this. Here's a pictu http://petersphotos.com/temp/Shrivelled.jpg The leaves used to be flat. I was giving all my houseplants regular doses of Baby Bio fertiliser to get them going, and stopped a couple of months ago when they all looked very healthy and the bottle ran out, so I didn't bother buying another one, but the shrivelling was after that, when I changed the pot to a larger one. -- I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves. |
#2
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Houseplant shrivelling
On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 13:18:51 -0000, Martin wrote:
On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 13:07:10 -0000, "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote: On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 08:23:00 -0000, Chris Hogg wrote: On Tue, 3 Mar 2015 06:53:49 -0000, "Bob Hobden" wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote I have a houseplant which I moved into a larger pot (as it was consuming the water very rapidly, it had outgrown the small pot). As soon as I did this, the leaves have shrivelled up. AFAIK I'm not over or under watering it, and there are no signs of beasties. What's wrong with it? It would be helpful if we knew what the plant was, how long you have had it and it's size. and a picture. I don't know what it is, it was given to me a year ago, and has flourished in all that time and grown larger. Only changing pot made it do this. Here's a pictu http://petersphotos.com/temp/Shrivelled.jpg Was the photo taken in summer? No, just now, in winter. The room is 18C, 45% humidity. -- If god is so amazing, why did the dinosaurs die out? |
#3
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Houseplant shrivelling
"Tough Guy no. 1265" ... Martin wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote: Chris Hogg wrote: Bob Hobden" wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote I have a houseplant which I moved into a larger pot (as it was consuming the water very rapidly, it had outgrown the small pot). As soon as I did this, the leaves have shrivelled up. AFAIK I'm not over or under watering it, and there are no signs of beasties. What's wrong with it? It would be helpful if we knew what the plant was, how long you have had it and it's size. and a picture. I don't know what it is, it was given to me a year ago, and has flourished in all that time and grown larger. Only changing pot made it do this. Here's a pictu http://petersphotos.com/temp/Shrivelled.jpg Was the photo taken in summer? No, just now, in winter. The room is 18C, 45% humidity. It looks to be suffering from lack of water but it could equally be too much water which has rotted the roots, the symptoms are the same. Quite a dry atmosphere for a tropical plant too, not near a radiator by any chance? -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#4
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Houseplant shrivelling
On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 17:58:55 -0000, Bob Hobden wrote:
"Tough Guy no. 1265" ... Martin wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote: Chris Hogg wrote: Bob Hobden" wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote I have a houseplant which I moved into a larger pot (as it was consuming the water very rapidly, it had outgrown the small pot). As soon as I did this, the leaves have shrivelled up. AFAIK I'm not over or under watering it, and there are no signs of beasties. What's wrong with it? It would be helpful if we knew what the plant was, how long you have had it and it's size. and a picture. I don't know what it is, it was given to me a year ago, and has flourished in all that time and grown larger. Only changing pot made it do this. Here's a pictu http://petersphotos.com/temp/Shrivelled.jpg Was the photo taken in summer? No, just now, in winter. The room is 18C, 45% humidity. It looks to be suffering from lack of water but it could equally be too much water which has rotted the roots, the symptoms are the same. I've got a meter on it so I know when to water it. Quite a dry atmosphere for a tropical plant too, not near a radiator by any chance? It is above a radiator. And 45% humidity is quite normal for a house in winter with the heating on. I wasn't aware it was a tropical plant. It's always been above that radiator. It only wilted when I increased the pot size. -- Stupid laws, number 467: In America, it is illegal to put money in someone else's parking meter. |
#5
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Houseplant shrivelling
"Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote
Bob Hobden wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" ... Martin wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote: Chris Hogg wrote: Bob Hobden" wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote I have a houseplant which I moved into a larger pot (as it was consuming the water very rapidly, it had outgrown the small pot). As soon as I did this, the leaves have shrivelled up. AFAIK I'm not over or under watering it, and there are no signs of beasties. What's wrong with it? It would be helpful if we knew what the plant was, how long you have had it and it's size. and a picture. I don't know what it is, it was given to me a year ago, and has flourished in all that time and grown larger. Only changing pot made it do this. Here's a pictu http://petersphotos.com/temp/Shrivelled.jpg Was the photo taken in summer? No, just now, in winter. The room is 18C, 45% humidity. It looks to be suffering from lack of water but it could equally be too much water which has rotted the roots, the symptoms are the same. I've got a meter on it so I know when to water it. Quite a dry atmosphere for a tropical plant too, not near a radiator by any chance? It is above a radiator. And 45% humidity is quite normal for a house in winter with the heating on. I wasn't aware it was a tropical plant. It's always been above that radiator. It only wilted when I increased the pot size. Move it from above the radiator as it's getting too much heat, and with the general low humidity, the even lower humidity above the radiator is doing the damage. It's scorched. It's often the case in winter where most of the windows also have radiators under them so plants get damaged in the way yours has. Unfortunately most windows do have radiators under them (if you have radiators) so it's a common problem in winter. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#6
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Houseplant shrivelling
On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 23:13:41 -0000, Bob Hobden wrote:
"Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote Bob Hobden wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" ... Martin wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote: Chris Hogg wrote: Bob Hobden" wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote I have a houseplant which I moved into a larger pot (as it was consuming the water very rapidly, it had outgrown the small pot). As soon as I did this, the leaves have shrivelled up. AFAIK I'm not over or under watering it, and there are no signs of beasties. What's wrong with it? It would be helpful if we knew what the plant was, how long you have had it and it's size. and a picture. I don't know what it is, it was given to me a year ago, and has flourished in all that time and grown larger. Only changing pot made it do this. Here's a pictu http://petersphotos.com/temp/Shrivelled.jpg Was the photo taken in summer? No, just now, in winter. The room is 18C, 45% humidity. It looks to be suffering from lack of water but it could equally be too much water which has rotted the roots, the symptoms are the same. I've got a meter on it so I know when to water it. Quite a dry atmosphere for a tropical plant too, not near a radiator by any chance? It is above a radiator. And 45% humidity is quite normal for a house in winter with the heating on. I wasn't aware it was a tropical plant. It's always been above that radiator. It only wilted when I increased the pot size. Move it from above the radiator as it's getting too much heat, and with the general low humidity, the even lower humidity above the radiator is doing the damage. It's scorched. It's often the case in winter where most of the windows also have radiators under them so plants get damaged in the way yours has. Unfortunately most windows do have radiators under them (if you have radiators) so it's a common problem in winter. Odd that it lasted this far then suddenly went. It seems to coincide with the change in pot. I guess that altered how much water it was taking in. I'll swap it with one that's on a windowledge with no radiator under it. -- Interesting fact number 923: Half the world's population has seen at least one Bond movie. |
#7
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Houseplant shrivelling
On Wed, 04 Mar 2015 01:29:48 -0000, "Tough Guy no. 1265"
wrote: On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 23:13:41 -0000, Bob Hobden wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote Bob Hobden wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" ... Martin wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote: Chris Hogg wrote: Bob Hobden" wrote: "Tough Guy no. 1265" wrote I have a houseplant which I moved into a larger pot (as it was consuming the water very rapidly, it had outgrown the small pot). As soon as I did this, the leaves have shrivelled up. AFAIK I'm not over or under watering it, and there are no signs of beasties. What's wrong with it? It would be helpful if we knew what the plant was, how long you have had it and it's size. and a picture. I don't know what it is, it was given to me a year ago, and has flourished in all that time and grown larger. Only changing pot made it do this. Here's a pictu http://petersphotos.com/temp/Shrivelled.jpg Was the photo taken in summer? No, just now, in winter. The room is 18C, 45% humidity. It looks to be suffering from lack of water but it could equally be too much water which has rotted the roots, the symptoms are the same. I've got a meter on it so I know when to water it. Quite a dry atmosphere for a tropical plant too, not near a radiator by any chance? It is above a radiator. And 45% humidity is quite normal for a house in winter with the heating on. I wasn't aware it was a tropical plant. It's always been above that radiator. It only wilted when I increased the pot size. Move it from above the radiator as it's getting too much heat, and with the general low humidity, the even lower humidity above the radiator is doing the damage. It's scorched. It's often the case in winter where most of the windows also have radiators under them so plants get damaged in the way yours has. Unfortunately most windows do have radiators under them (if you have radiators) so it's a common problem in winter. Odd that it lasted this far then suddenly went. It seems to coincide with the change in pot. I guess that altered how much water it was taking in. I'll swap it with one that's on a windowledge with no radiator under it. What compost did you use? Maybe it doesn't like the compost. If you don't know what it is, does it need an acid compost and you've used one with lime! Just a thought! |
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