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#1
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Phyllostachys Bissetii Leaves
Hello
I recently bought a Phyllostachys Bissetii and have kept it in a container. It was dried out when I bought it but after watering it was doing really well and putting up lots more culms and lush green leaves, however, now it's having many leaves turn yellow and not looking as good. Does anyone know why this may be? It's been in the same position since I bought it 3 months ago. Thanks for any advice. |
#2
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Phyllostachys Bissetii Leaves
Giraffeman wrote:
I recently bought a Phyllostachys Bissetii and have kept it in a container. It was dried out when I bought it but after watering it was doing really well and putting up lots more culms and lush green leaves, however, now it's having many leaves turn yellow and not looking as good. Does anyone know why this may be? It's been in the same position since I bought it 3 months ago. It could be a lot of different reasons. Look into the following: 1. Natural cycle... Bamboos are evergreen, but they do shed 20 to 30% of their leaves before winter. I have noticed that when mine do this, the leaves closest to the main culm die first. So, if this is the pattern you are seeing, then you have no problem. 2. Too infrequent watering... Especially if the root mass is too large for the container, it could be drying out too quickly and not getting enough water. 3. Too much water... Too frequent watering can lead to root rot, which will eventually show via the above groung health of the plant. NOTE: A meter to check soil dampness is pretty cheap... on the order of $5 or $10 for the cheap ones. They work pretty well, but they don't always give an accurate reading depending on the type of soil and how well the probe makes contact with the soil... Useful, but confirm the reading by scratching your finger into the top bit of soil. 4. Lack of nutrition: Now is not a good time to fertilize with nitrogen, because you don't want to trigger shoots that will not have enough time to harden off before winter. But the plant may be starved... If you think this is the case, buy a real low-nitrogen (relatively high phosphorous and pottasium) fertilizer. Something like a 3-10-10 or 0-10-10 if you can find it. Just a touch should be enough if this is the case. 5. Over-fertilization: Too much fertilizer (especially high nitrogen) can burn the roots and show above ground with poor health. 6. The plant has out-grown the pot: This can actually be the main cause of #2 or #4 above... Container bamboos will grow to displace so much soil that there is nothing left to retain water and not enough soil for the roots to pull nutrition from. In this case, you just have to divide the plant. Dividing this time of year must not be bad (perhaps if you have a greenhouse?) because half of the nursery bamboos I have bought had tags indicating they were divided in Nov. or Dec. Anyway, it is best to take the plant out and wash off much of the soil so you can see what you are working with.. Keep it always wet while doing this, even sticking the parts in a 5 gallon bucket of water while you are working other parts of the plant if you have to... Letting it dry out is a really bad thing for the plant. When dividing, try to cut it into multiple good sized chunks with the culms attached. You can trim any matted bunched up roots off and discard them, but try to keep as much healthy root mass attached as possible. Put each part in a pot that is several inches larger around than the division you are planting. Use a really loose soil that has about 30% small bark chips mixed in, and shake the soil down all around the roots. Don't compress it, but also try not to leave any big air pockets, such as might be created by a root preventing the soil from settling down. Finally, trim the culms down a bit in height. This reduces the chance that the loose plant will fall over, and also helps balence the smaller root mass to the amount of leaf mass. If there is only a small section of rhyzome in the division, trim the top down to where there are only one or two branches. If there is a good amount of rhyzome and root intact, you might get away with trimming very little or not at all. Water thoroughly and if possible, add some B vitamines to the water (Nurseries sell a transplant mix that includes this). Good luck! |
#3
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Phyllostachys Bissetii Leaves
Slip it out of the container and look over the root mass and rhizomes.
Healthy roots are pearly white, sick ones are brown My guess is you have a muck soil which tends to go anaerobic which is unhealthy for roots. Sharp sand or pearlite will loosen that up. Repotting might be as easy as dunking the root mass in a tub and washing free as much of the old soil and making a slurry of new soil to replace it. Giraffeman wrote: Hello I recently bought a Phyllostachys Bissetii and have kept it in a container. It was dried out when I bought it but after watering it was doing really well and putting up lots more culms and lush green leaves, however, now it's having many leaves turn yellow and not looking as good. Does anyone know why this may be? It's been in the same position since I bought it 3 months ago. Thanks for any advice. -- Giraffeman |
#4
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Quote:
A useful article can be found here which explains about purchasing a bamboo plant http://www.bamboosuccess.com/purchasing-bamboo.html |
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