Showing posts with label Chinese evergreen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinese evergreen. Show all posts

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Dealing with Some Root Rot

So, I may have mentioned that I quasi-drowned my new Chinese evergreen plant.  Well, in the hopes of preventing further deterioration and possibly inspiring new growth, I decided to repot it and give it some fresh soil and a new home.

Having bought this square pot at a yard sale for about 67 cents the day before, I laid in some clean stone base in anticipation of its new occupant!


And then, the climactic moment - yanking the root ball out of the old pot!  As you can see, at least half of this root system has become rotted.


I decided the nasty glob of mushy roots would probably not return to life and probably was not providing much nutritional infrastructure for the plant, so I might as well get rid of it and make room for new growth.  It didn't take much poking and prodding to drop the rotten portion.  In the photo below you can see the portion of healthy roots that remain and the mound of soil and roots that were removed.


In its new pot, I think the Chinese evergreen looks fantastic!  I trimmed off more leaves that had yellowed and I am hoping those were the last to go, but I wouldn't be surprised if more fell off - it lost a significant portion of its rooting.  However, I feel like there is new growth coming out of the top so I am hopeful that there is still hope for this plant!



Sunday, August 24, 2014

Sunday Cleaning

I have been somewhat neglectful of my house plants the past couple of weeks.  This is partly due to an overbooked schedule as well as some extended out of town trips.  For the first time ever, to my knowledge, I let my aluminum plant get so dried out that it was drooping!  Of course this was so startling to me that I didn't even think to snap a photo, I just ran to my watering can as soon as I saw it.  My polka dot plants were drooping and wilting, too, but those don't seem to concern me as much as old aluminum.  Luckily, the resiliency of these plants pulls through and you can see below how the aluminum plant perked right back up after a thorough watering.


A couple days into the week I realized that my double pot technique was not working for this Chinese evergreen.  I had placed this draining pot that it came in into a non-draining plastic pot so that I could drop the pot into a porous rustic looking old terra cotta pot, and not need a saucer.  As it turns out, the plastic non-draining pot was a little too snug, such that it did not allow for any overflow water to escape and thus the overflow of the way from the draining pot filled up in this little reservoir I created and kept the roots way too wet.  The result is the yellowing and drooping leaves.  What you can't garner from these photographs is the stench the stagnant rainwater left in this soil.  It smells so foul, I thought about letting it outside to air out for awhile.  I surmised that just letting the original pot rest on a small saucer was the best move for this plant for right now.  I'll have to keep my eyes open for a larger pot for the evergreen.

In researching this plant (in an effort to affirm what I had already assumed - that the yellow leaves were the result of overwatering), I discovered that it is common practice to remove the flowers.  Since this evergreen's flowers appeared to have stagnated in development (probably due to the aforementioned overwatering), I decided to snip them.  Additionally, they had begun to decay and/or leach onto the leaves a brownish goo reminiscent of withering iris debris.  I also noticed an unusual clear sap-like array of drips on some of the leaves.  I suspect this is also from the decaying flowers.  After reading this info about removing the flowers, I went ahead and snipped them all off at the stems as close to the main trunk as possible.



Lastly today, I decided to migrate my gerber daisy propagations from the sill by my front door up to the east-facing sill where the rest of my bright light plants are.  I repotted the small one shown in the itty bitty terra cotta pot below, and I also repotted the one in the square plastic pot, which was doing famously until this photo where it appears a bit saggy and on the verge of wilting.  The middle-sized gerber seemed to be doing quite well, with a root sticking out the bottom of its inner plastic pot.  It appears that the seed in the larger pot grew the largest, the seed in the smallest pot grew the smallest and the seed in the mid-sized pot grew to be a mid-sized plant, thus far.  In spite of this, I think I will leave the medium sized plant in its current pot, since that pot does a good job of keeping the soil moist every day (its inner sleeve is much smaller than the ceramic pot, so a lot of water stores in the bottom, which that protruding root is able to suck up from.