GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   United Kingdom (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/united-kingdom/)
-   -   rhoderdendrons (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/united-kingdom/33624-rhoderdendrons.html)

Sabaa Mundia 23-06-2003 03:44 AM

rhoderdendrons
 
hi there,
i bought a very big rhody plant this year and it flowered also very well. it
made new shoots but all of a sudden the shoots are drying up and then dying
(first starts drying up towards the extreame end the leaves droop downwards
then it follows back towards the inner part of the plant) what does this
mean. please help,
thanks ,
sabaa



The Devil's Advocate 23-06-2003 08:41 AM

rhoderdendrons
 
It could be lack of water if it is in it's original peat ball still. It
needs a good dowsing until it gets going properly

Sabaa Mundia wrote:
: hi there,
: i bought a very big rhody plant this year and it flowered also very
: well. it made new shoots but all of a sudden the shoots are drying up
: and then dying (first starts drying up towards the extreame end the
: leaves droop downwards then it follows back towards the inner part of
: the plant) what does this mean. please help,
: thanks ,
: sabaa

--
praise the lord and pass the ammunition



Chris Hogg 24-06-2003 06:20 PM

rhoderdendrons
 
On Mon, 23 Jun 2003 02:38:47 GMT, "Sabaa Mundia"
wrote:

hi there,
i bought a very big rhody plant this year and it flowered also very well. it
made new shoots but all of a sudden the shoots are drying up and then dying
(first starts drying up towards the extreame end the leaves droop downwards
then it follows back towards the inner part of the plant) what does this
mean. please help,
thanks ,
sabaa

As The DA says, it's probably dry. We've had a lot of hot dry weather
in the last few weeks and a freshly planted rhody won't have got it's
roots out into the soil yet to seek moisture (I assume it's not still
in its pot). Water it very well, several times over the next few days.
It may help the water to wet the soil if you add a few drops of
washing-up liquid to the water; it won't hurt the plant. When the
root-ball is really moist (but not before), mulch it well with a
two-inch thick layer of moist peat to help stop the soil drying by
evaporation. Water it regularly from now on (say twice a week) until
the autumn.


--
Chris

E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net

Chris Hogg 25-06-2003 08:30 PM

rhoderdendrons
 
On Mon, 23 Jun 2003 02:38:47 GMT, "Sabaa Mundia"
wrote:

hi there,
i bought a very big rhody plant this year and it flowered also very well. it
made new shoots but all of a sudden the shoots are drying up and then dying
(first starts drying up towards the extreame end the leaves droop downwards
then it follows back towards the inner part of the plant) what does this
mean. please help,
thanks ,
sabaa

As The DA says, it's probably dry. We've had a lot of hot dry weather
in the last few weeks and a freshly planted rhody won't have got it's
roots out into the soil yet to seek moisture (I assume it's not still
in its pot). Water it very well, several times over the next few days.
It may help the water to wet the soil if you add a few drops of
washing-up liquid to the water; it won't hurt the plant. When the
root-ball is really moist (but not before), mulch it well with a
two-inch thick layer of moist peat to help stop the soil drying by
evaporation. Water it regularly from now on (say twice a week) until
the autumn.


--
Chris

E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:54 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter