General Chat
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A Former User last edited by
...but the dieffenbachia's root ball may also be pretty thick and entangled up against the pot wall if it's an older plant and becoming pot-bound.
No, it is a freshly potted offshoot.
- Yes, I should outpot them soon.
- The pot(s) should be rather deep.
The one(s) at the pot edge are most likely separate plants, since the mandarin doesn't ordinarily branch out underground.
Noticed!
The ones too entangled with the dieffenbachia could cause root shock to the dieffenbachia, so I'd move very slowly and carefully in such cases. If it comes down to it, you may have to sacrifice some of the mandarins for the sake of the dieffenbachia...
You're sure I can't leave some one or two within the dieffenbachia's pot?
Ever? Damage inevitable, they can't coexist like?
...but I'd hold off fertilizing of any kind until at least two weeks after repotting. Be sure the new pot has drain holes and a dish...
- I repot I use a new, reach soil, just bought or something: so I usually follow that it doesn't need fertilising for a year, or a season.
- I always.
So, should I replant some right away - this very autumn?
I'd wait for the rest till the next spring. Like those near the edge. As the dieff is freshly repotted, not being "pot-bound" yet. -
blackbird71 last edited by
You can try anything, and for a time the mandarins and dieffenbachia will indeed peacefully coexist. I'm just noting that the mandarin is, after all, a 25-foot tall (and wide) tree at maturity, and will tend to eventually express that characteristic. Trees of that height develop root sizes to match, so at some point, the mandarin will attempt to take over the entirety of the pot's soil in its attempt to live out its 'tree' destiny. How fast that happens, and how well the dieffenbachia tolerates it, is hard to say. What can be accurately said is that the roots of the two kinds of plants will gradually become hopelessly entangled with each other in the confined space of a pot.
My guess (and its only a guess based on a lot of gardening experience with other plants) is that you have perhaps two or three months of root growth before anything irreversibly harmful occurs... but it will become gradually more difficult to safely separate with the passage of time.
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A Former User last edited by
Bought some soil and finer drenage and outpotted those yesterday.
Yes, they sat rather deep. Almost touched the dieff's root, had to extract some MT not very carefully, but planted all, managed to separate their root parts. -
blackbird71 last edited by
Well, it sounds pretty fair so far. If they're going to make it, things should be apparent in about a week or so, otherwise the leaves will start to show stress (wilt, droop, etc). Just keep an eye on watering... it can be a bit tricky to get it right without over-watering. If your soil and pots drain well, that shouldn't be much of a problem though. As the plants get bigger, they get more forgiving about the water (though they'll never tolerate standing in wet soil for long periods).
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A Former User last edited by
...otherwise the leaves will start to show stress (wilt, droop, etc). Just keep an eye on watering... it can be a bit tricky to get it right without over-watering.
Some do look limp - the leaves. Others not.
Well, I made the soil wet - perhaps not enough?
Drainage is good. The surface doesn't look moisty in places. Should I water them again now? -
blackbird71 last edited by
I'd poke a finger down in the soil about an inch or so away from the plant stem and see how damp the soil looks down there. If it's damp, don't re-water yet. On small plants, the soil tends to dry out from the surface downward since the roots' water uptake is still low, hence it's easy to over-water by just looking at the surface. The plants with limp leaves are probably showing some root-damage stress, and they may recover with time if they put out new feeder roots. The way roots work is that they require moisture primarily to make dissolved soil nutrients accessible, and too much water can actually drown the root cells.
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A Former User last edited by
My finger felt like 30 to 40 per cent humidity, though I usually do it with pencils. By the time you read it, it'll be 25% or less, central heating on, temperature fluctuates between +17 and +20, approximately, centigrade. I've had an advise for some other plants that one shouldn't soak freshly potted plants whose root system's young, or even non-existent somehow: the soil should be moist but not wet, so that the plants knew there's water here, and they developed their roots. There's no need in higher amounts of water since their green parts are very small - right?
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A Former User last edited by
What will "Happy New Year!" be in Gaelic?
Scottish Gaelic will do*:)*It's Samhain today, or yesterday, these days around. The celebration being Celtic Turn of the Year actually.
Helloween later originated from Samhain, got settled at November 1. Samhain is actually a tad later. About on this week, November 4-like. -
Deleted User last edited by
My mom had her knee surgery yesterday and she's feeling just fine. In fact, she no longer has to wear crutches tomorrow and she's going to start walking along with wearing a smaller bandage.
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A Former User last edited by
How about some reunion here on this coming Christmas?
I'm not religious, at all, but listening to the radio maybe, it seems the Christmas Spirit has been catching up with me :lol: -
Deleted User last edited by
apparently posting bona fide links to add further information is acceptable and appreciated, while spam will be deleted and @leocg will swing his banhammer without mercy.
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sgunhouse Moderator Volunteer last edited by
I removed one link from his first post since it was the same as his username - it looked like he was just trying to cleverly hide spamming for his own site. If you identify something as your own site and are specific about how it "doesn't work" we will accept that.
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A Former User last edited by
Hello!
Last night decided to tune in to a station for a good sleep, took this Absolute Radio 60s -- it was awesome! \m/