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#1
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Standard Bay in touble
hi all
I have a standard bay in a container and it was severely potbound (even when supplied!) I have repotted and the leaves are still dry as a bone My neightbour told me its practically inpossible to kill a bay!? the dry foliage is just sitting there would I prune to enduce new growth any thoughts tia niall |
#2
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Niall Smyth wrote:
hi all I have a standard bay in a container and it was severely potbound (even when supplied!) I have repotted and the leaves are still dry as a bone My neightbour told me its practically inpossible to kill a bay!? That is basically true. I once defoliated on eby using soft soap as an insecticide on it and it's leaves dessicated and dropped off almost overnight. It still came back from the roots the following year. the dry foliage is just sitting there would I prune to enduce new growth any thoughts I'd leave it out in the sun and the warm watering periodically when it is dry at the roots. If you prune now you could easily be cutting out live wood. My olive trees also suffer similar problems largely because N Yorks isn't very Mediterranean in winter. They grow more slowly but still survive. Regards, Martin Brown |
#3
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Niall Smyth wrote:
hi all I have a standard bay in a container and it was severely potbound (even when supplied!) I have repotted and the leaves are still dry as a bone My neightbour told me its practically inpossible to kill a bay!? the dry foliage is just sitting there would I prune to enduce new growth any thoughts No, don't prune it yet: that won't make it develop leaves if it wasn't going to anyhow. You can certainly kill them, especially with the aid of your friendly neighbourhood vine weevil. How long is it since a new leaf appeared? Is there a healthy-looking little pointy bud at the base of the top leaves? What watering have you done? -- Mike. |
#4
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In message , Niall Smyth
writes hi all I have a standard bay in a container and it was severely potbound (even when supplied!) I have repotted and the leaves are still dry as a bone My neightbour told me its practically inpossible to kill a bay!? the dry foliage is just sitting there would I prune to enduce new growth any thoughts I had a similar problem with one of mine and decided to plant it out in the garden. It is now thriving. -- June Hughes |
#5
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"michael adams" wrote in message ... "Niall Smyth" wrote in message news hi all I have a standard bay in a container and it was severely potbound (even when supplied!) I have repotted and the leaves are still dry as a bone ... By dry leaves do mean they're drooping ? Did you tease out the rootball before repotting ? The latter is a very good point. Regards, Emrys Davies. |
#6
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"Niall Smyth" wrote in message news hi all I have a standard bay in a container and it was severely potbound (even when supplied!) I have repotted and the leaves are still dry as a bone My neightbour told me its practically inpossible to kill a bay!? the dry foliage is just sitting there would I prune to enduce new growth any thoughts tia niall When you say 'dry foliage' do you mean that the leaves are dried suitable for culinary use? If so, it is in serious trouble, but possibly not dead. The leaves should be a nice glosy green. I had one like this, and it was to all intents and purposes dormant for about 2 years. The stem was still green, there were minute signs of buds, but no growth. I kept it in the shade (less stress) and watered it when I remembered. It has now recovered, with new growth from below the soil but nothing from the main stem, which has slowly died back over the two years. Now cut back. I did kill another one in a much smaller pot by severely underwatering. My suggestion would be to put the pot in amongst other vegetation - shrubs etc. - where it is out of direct sun and the surrounding plants provide shelter and raise the humidity. This should be a low stress location. Keep it watered, and hope for the best. Don't give up too soon - they can be dormant for a long while but as long as the stem is green there is still some life there. HTH Dave R |
#7
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Hi all
thanks for the tips answers to a couple of questions posed back The leaves are brown and crispy - not suitable for spag bol! The trunk is solid and seems okay I didnt remember to tease it out - probably the solution? Will rest it in the shade - in my inexperience I have been thinking that the sun would revive it Regards niall "David W.E. Roberts" wrote in message ... "Niall Smyth" wrote in message news hi all I have a standard bay in a container and it was severely potbound (even when supplied!) I have repotted and the leaves are still dry as a bone My neightbour told me its practically inpossible to kill a bay!? the dry foliage is just sitting there would I prune to enduce new growth any thoughts tia niall When you say 'dry foliage' do you mean that the leaves are dried suitable for culinary use? If so, it is in serious trouble, but possibly not dead. The leaves should be a nice glosy green. I had one like this, and it was to all intents and purposes dormant for about 2 years. The stem was still green, there were minute signs of buds, but no growth. I kept it in the shade (less stress) and watered it when I remembered. It has now recovered, with new growth from below the soil but nothing from the main stem, which has slowly died back over the two years. Now cut back. I did kill another one in a much smaller pot by severely underwatering. My suggestion would be to put the pot in amongst other vegetation - shrubs etc. - where it is out of direct sun and the surrounding plants provide shelter and raise the humidity. This should be a low stress location. Keep it watered, and hope for the best. Don't give up too soon - they can be dormant for a long while but as long as the stem is green there is still some life there. HTH Dave R |
#8
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Niall Smyth wrote:
[...] thanks for the tips [...] "David W.E. Roberts" wrote in message [...] I had one like this, and it was to all intents and purposes dormant for about 2 years. The stem was still green, there were minute signs of buds, but no growth. [...] Dave, this is inspiring. When I moved last year I brought away two little bay seedlings. Something pesky took away all the leaves -- only maybe four in all! -- from one of them a few months ago, but the skinny five-inch stem is still green and alive-seeming, though it's died back to about three inches now. There are the same tiny but static signs of buds. I've been treating it just as you describe in the faint hope that something might happen eventually from root level; now I'm going to take the possibility seriously. Many thanks. Niall, not spreading out the roots on planting a tree is quite a common cause of failure -- often many years later. Sometimes if you dig up an unexplained casualty, you find the main roots have grown so big that they've strangled one another in the bunched-up position in which they were left on planting out. Some trees can't compensate for the crowding by sending out new roots above the constriction. Best to shake the soil off a new tree and soak it in a bucket for an hour, so the roots are flexible when you plant it. (There'll be some for which this is asking for trouble, but these will have a note in the gardening book saying something like "resents root disturbance". I'd be cautious about doing it to eucalypts, for example.) -- Mike. |
#9
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