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some fatalities this winter :(
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Posted by stellabella07 5 (My Page) on Fri, Jan 8, 10 at 20:39
| Well this winter is taking its toll. While cleaning my closet I checked on my plumeria that were being kept dormant. I guess the closet got too cold and I lost a few. My beautiful Daisy Wilcox, Passion Orange, and Pink Pansy won't make it this year. The black tip and rot is almost heartbreaking. The ones I kept in my laundry room are looking beautiful though! Silk ribbons looks like she's gonna make it along with Lei Rainbow and suprisingly Raspberry Delight still has her leaves on. I pulled Mardi gras out of the closet and put it in the laundry room too. All my cute little seedlings are gone :( Hopefully this horrible Kansas freeze will go away soon! Anyone else have any of their plumies die? |
Follow-Up Postings:
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| Hi Stellabella, Sorry for your loss. Guess that means you'll be visiting floridacolors.com. I'm a newbie at this and sadly admit to losing several, but for the opposite reason. I planted them all in the recommended black nursery pots, out in all day autumn sunlight. Well, here in central Arizona that tended to be way too hot for some and I lost a Pink Pansy, Cerise, Mardi Gras, Aloha, Rim Fire, Kimi Moragne and Stargazer. They seem to take a while to tell you "I'm dying", so by the time I corrected the problem they were gone. An expensive lesson, but I do want to give it another try. |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| Stella, I am so sorry to hear this...It can be devastating to loose just one..:-( I hope your others do well for you... Mike |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| Are you keeping them watered at least a little bit? |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| Dave has a great point.. I would also ask if you might of happened to have them in a soil mix that was watered, but stayed wet too long? Mike..:-) |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| Plumerias can take quite an amount of heat and humidity. I wonder if you watered them regularly which is not done while rooting. I normally water once and then wait for leaves to grow before watering again. The stems have water to supply the plants until roots grow. Rot is usually a product of too much water or the cutting exposed to very cold conditions while being stored, shipped or during the first months of rooting. Bill |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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Thanks Everyone! I did some digging around when i threw them out. The Daisy W had no roots. I think that might have contributed. Im scared to water them even the tiniest bit. I dont want to lose them. Not too sure what happened with the Passion Orange. It was fully rooted and the soil was dry. When I brought them in for the winter all the soil was dry but I did water them a *tiny* bit when I had them on a heat mat, Less than half a gallon for all of them. Faithnhope- I couldnt handle losing a Mardi Gras, She is TOO beautiful. |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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- Posted by castnet 9Tx-Gal Island (My Page) on
Mon, Jan 18, 10 at 16:42
| Never worried about plumeria before, but we had 4 straight days of temps in the upper 20's and I lost quiet a few of the plants. I have some very large ones and the tips are kinda spongy so I don't know if they will recover. I cut several large ones down and will try to use the tips to get more started. Several years ago we had snow for a few days and never lost a plant. |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| So far, I've lost the growing tip on one plant (Black tip) due to spider mites. |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| Dave, can't you just keep spraying every week to keep them at bay if not gone? I have yet to loose any from black tip due to those stinkin pesty pests.. Mike..:-) |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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stellabella- e-mail me at plumeriabill@yahoo.com and I have a partial solution. Bill Dave- sorry to hear your bug problem but I also find that if I do not carefully remove any leaf stem pieces or the last small leaf starts on the tip, both can also induce rot, depending on the variety. Mike- love your enthusiasm. Just think you were going to throw in the towel at one time. Glad you hung in there. |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| Mike and Bill, This plant is indoors, so I don't do pesticides. However, I do use the Safer Soap, which can cause the plants to defoliate if I spray too much on them. So I try to limit that. I also spray water occasionally -- not sure that helps at all. The mites suck on the developing new leaves as well as on the green tips themselves. The black tip develops quickly. We have a 1-year-old baby who keeps us on our toes, so I don't always have time to go down to spray them or check on them! This is a Lei Rainbow and I believe I've had issues with this particular plant before, so it may just be a more vulnerable variety. I may just chuck it. |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| PLEASE HELP WE HAD A FREEZE AND SOME TIPS ON IN GROUND PLUMERIA HAD BECOME VERY SOFT .SHOULD I CUT THE SOFT TIPS OFF ? PLANTS IN POTS IN MY SCREENED PORCH ARE FINE.THANK YOU |
RE: some fatalities this winter :(
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| If the tips are black or look like a candle that has melted cut it now the longer you leave the bad on the more it will rot Cut til you get to clean white. Here in central fl we had 11 days of freezing weather total devastation. Lost alot |
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