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Sickly Escalonia's
Hello all,
I planted about 20 Escalonias in order to form a hedge around 2 sides of my garden. When I first planted them they were a healthy dark green with small white flowers but over time they have become less 'green' and have had no flowers for some time now .. It appears that the soil which they are in is lacking nutrients and I have been told to get some tomato feed to give to the plants to help them. I am just wondering if this is the answer and if so, how much and how regularly should I feed the plants ? As hedges go it is currently in a pretty sorry state as the plants have grown but are not very dense. They are currently about 2'6" tall. I am assuming that I need to trim them back a fair bit to try to encourage more growth at the base as well as feeding them ? Not being a gardening type I was wondering if anyone could offer any advice please .. Thanks very much .. Dave. |
#2
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Sickly Escalonia's
On Mar 28, 10:37*pm, Sacha wrote:
On 2011-03-28 20:41:17 +0100, Simmo said: Hello all, I planted about 20 Escalonias in order to form a hedge around 2 sides of my garden. When I first planted them they were a healthy dark green with small white flowers but over time they have become less 'green' and have had no flowers for some time now .. It appears that the soil which they are in is lacking nutrients and I have been told to get some tomato feed to give to the plants to help them. I am just wondering if this is the answer and if so, how much and how regularly should I feed the plants ? As hedges go it is currently in a pretty sorry state as the plants have grown but are not very dense. They are currently about 2'6" tall. I am assuming that I need to trim them back a fair bit to try to encourage more growth at the base as well as feeding them ? Not being a gardening type I was wondering if anyone could offer any advice please .. Thanks very much .. Dave. Where do you live, when did you plant them and what was there before you planted them? *I wouldn't do anything to them until you've learned a bit more about them. *They need to get their roots down and put on a fair bit of growth before you start trimking them for bushiness because they seem to be struggling to survive. -- Sachawww.hillhousenursery.com South Devon- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I would be more inclined to give them a feed with More Nitrogen (N) than you will get in a tomato feed |
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