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#1
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Camelia (Sad Looking) Longish post
I have a Camellia which is about 3ft tall with drooping yellowy leaves.
For a few years this Camellia was in the ground where it received sun for most of the day and often looked poorly and i didn't know why. I now realise that Camellias shouldn't be subjected to full sun and need feeding....Six weeks ago I transferred the Camellia to a pot filled with 70% Erricacous and 30% ordinary garden compost. Placed the pot in a sheltered location which receives some sun during the day, the plant still looks a little sad. The compost is moist and I am concerned that some leaves are still drooping,changing to brown down the sides, then yellow and then dropping off. Although there are plenty of green shiny leaves on the plant too. I realise that in the past i have neglected this plant and am wondering what more I can do. For example should I start feeding it with liquid Erricacous eg: "Miracle Gro" and if so how regularly ?I don't want to overdose it. Thanks for any info. Moo |
#2
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On Wed, 15 Jun 2005 17:27:12 +0100, Moo [email protected] wrote:
I have a Camellia which is about 3ft tall with drooping yellowy leaves. For a few years this Camellia was in the ground where it received sun for most of the day and often looked poorly and i didn't know why. I now realise that Camellias shouldn't be subjected to full sun and need feeding....Six weeks ago I transferred the Camellia to a pot filled with 70% Erricacous and 30% ordinary garden compost. Placed the pot in a sheltered location which receives some sun during the day, the plant still looks a little sad. The compost is moist and I am concerned that some leaves are still drooping,changing to brown down the sides, then yellow and then dropping off. Although there are plenty of green shiny leaves on the plant too. I realise that in the past i have neglected this plant and am wondering what more I can do. For example should I start feeding it with liquid Erricacous eg: "Miracle Gro" and if so how regularly ?I don't want to overdose it. Six weeks isn't long, leave it alone- apart from watering as needed. It won't like overwatering and it won't like hard water. Start feeding later in the summer when it looks a bit better but stop before - lets say mid August, you want the wood to ripen, you don't want soft new growth at that stage. It is always a bad idea to feed a poorly looking plant when you know the cause is not malnutrition - in your case the plant is still suffering from being transplanted and as yet there's insufficient active root for it to benefit from feeding. It will look a whole lot better next year. ================================================= Rod Weed my email address to reply. http://website.lineone.net/~rodcraddock/index.html |
#3
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On Wed, 15 Jun 2005 17:27:12 +0100, Moo [email protected] wrote:
I have a Camellia which is about 3ft tall with drooping yellowy leaves. For a few years this Camellia was in the ground where it received sun for most of the day and often looked poorly and i didn't know why. I now realise that Camellias shouldn't be subjected to full sun and need feeding....Six weeks ago I transferred the Camellia to a pot filled with 70% Erricacous and 30% ordinary garden compost. Placed the pot in a sheltered location which receives some sun during the day, the plant still looks a little sad. The compost is moist and I am concerned that some leaves are still drooping,changing to brown down the sides, then yellow and then dropping off. Although there are plenty of green shiny leaves on the plant too. I realise that in the past i have neglected this plant and am wondering what more I can do. For example should I start feeding it with liquid Erricacous eg: "Miracle Gro" and if so how regularly ?I don't want to overdose it. Thanks for any info. Moo Camellias don't mind full sun, although they are probably happier in dappled shade. I have several that get all the sun that's going (and all the salt-laden gales!), and they thrive. I associate excess sun with a corky texture on the leaves, but not yellowing. Yellowing leaves sounds like chlorosis. Was it growing in acid soil before you potted it up? If not, then I presume a lot of that soil was still on the roots and went into the pot with it. In principle that's not a problem, and when it's settled in I would feed it with a fertiliser intended for ericaceous plants as you suggest, although it will be a bit late for feeding this year. It's not a good idea to give a high-nitrogen feed after mid July as it encourages late growth which doesn't ripen before the autumn. At the end of July you could give it a high-potash feed to encourage bud-set for next year's flowers. If you want to feed something to compensate for residual alkalinity in the soil, use Sequestrine itself or something similar (Murphy do one) containing no other fertiliser. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net |
#4
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"Moo" [email protected] wrote in message ... I have a Camellia which is about 3ft tall with drooping yellowy leaves. For a few years this Camellia was in the ground where it received sun for most of the day and often looked poorly and i didn't know why. I now realise that Camellias shouldn't be subjected to full sun and need feeding....Six weeks ago I transferred the Camellia to a pot filled with 70% Erricacous and 30% ordinary garden compost. Placed the pot in a sheltered location which receives some sun during the day, the plant still looks a little sad. The compost is moist and I am concerned that some leaves are still drooping,changing to brown down the sides, then yellow and then dropping off. Although there are plenty of green shiny leaves on the plant too. I realise that in the past i have neglected this plant and am wondering what more I can do. For example should I start feeding it with liquid Erricacous eg: "Miracle Gro" and if so how regularly ?I don't want to overdose it. Thanks for any info. Moo Camelias certainly only like Acid soil and must have all ericacous compost and rain water too .......do not use Tap water ......they dont want their feet wet either ........it may be just dropping stressed leaves so a feeding of ericacous plant food might help |
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