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starofleviathan

Plumies Went Swimming

starofleviathan
11 years ago

Howdy all! My friend's Plumies got inundated with saltwater after her home was flooded thanks to Hurricane Sandy. The usual advice has been to flush the pot with water as much as possible & let it dry out. Unfortunately she left them outside afterwards & they got frost damage to their leaves. I can't tell if they're still alive or not. The stems still feel nice & hard but the plants smell like seashells o_O. She's asked me to babysit them while her home undergoes repairs so I was wondering if any of you kind folks would have any advice to help me figure out what I should do for her Plumies at this stage? Would it be better to get fresh soil, clean out the pot (it's plastic), rinse the roots, & try to repot them now - or should I just wait things out & see if they recover?

Comments (9)

  • mksmth zone 7a Tulsa Oklahoma
    11 years ago

    I think a good soil flush would be all you needed, but to be safe you could also bare root, rinse and repot. They should be ready to sleep for winter anyways.

    Im still a rookie so that may not be the best advice but its what i would do.

    Mike

  • starofleviathan
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Thx Mike for your reply! Appreciate it! I'm still a rookie too lol. Have a great day :)
    ~ Angharand

  • houstontexas123
    11 years ago

    i'd repot with fresh potting mix. sea water is very salty. and since its cold, the plumies shouldn't be sitting in wet mix.

  • Loveplants2 8b Virginia Beach, Virginia
    11 years ago

    I would agree to get them out of the salty mix and bareroot them in the chance of saving them.. ASAP... once washed from all of the salty soil, repot in a fast draining mix. I would even wait to water since you will have rinsed them pretty well as you are bare rooting them. Use a mild tempered water when rinsing. Time will tell if they will respond to the change in conditions. I would hope that they will since you are taking charge now..

    Good Luck.. and thank you for your kind words.. : )

    Please keep us posted..

    Laura

  • starofleviathan
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Thank you kindly dear Laura, especially considering all that you're going through right now. You are such a kind hearted soul - everyone on here has nothing but wonderful things to rave about you :).

    I will take my friend's Plumies out of their briny brew ASAP now & try to find enough of the ingredients to make a fast draining mix. I also hope they will make it because her Plumies are from a cutting she got from her Mother (who's passed on) over 30 yrs ago.

    Kindest regards, Angharand

  • honeybunny2 Fox
    11 years ago

    I just recently found out that if you add gypsum to my soil at the coast it removes sodium from the salty soil, and replaces it with calcium. It does not affect the soil ph or fertility. I can now grow plants that use to die because they could not tolerate the salty soil at the coast. You might want to add some to you yard this next spring. You just sprinkle it on the top of the soil and water it in. Barbra

  • starofleviathan
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    houstontexas123: Thank you for your response! My friend's Plumies are sitting in my room (70 degrees) next to my Plumies & Brugs so I'm hoping I can stave things off until I can find someone around here who's selling potting mix so I can do a repot. The soil is dried out completely (metered it & did the finger test) but I still don't want to let them overwinter in that soil. God knows what else got into it after it was flooded. I saw oil on the surface of the water in the canal & yards (!) & then learned the neighbor's oil tank flipped over & spilled out into the surrounding areas so that definitely gives me cause for concern. I think the best thing to do is repot ASAP & let nature take its course.

    honeybunny2: Wow, I didn't know that about adding gypsum to the soil! Thank you so much for the info! I'm definitely going to tell my friend to add that to her soil in spring. Thx again hun! Hope you are feeling better :)!

  • jandey1
    11 years ago

    Angharand, if you can't find potting soil, try mulch, just for keeping them over winter.

    After washing off the roots and cleaning the pots you can put mulch on the bottom of the pots, set the now-bare roots on top and add mulch over the top to keep the roots from drying out over winter. That way you don't need to try to make mix this time of year, and you shouldn't need to water the plants either as they'll be going dormant anyway. They'll probably just need to be propped up or staked. Good luck!

  • starofleviathan
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Whew! Thank you for the heads up jandey! I was wondering what to do since I can't find their usual mix & this is my first time having to deal with something like this.

    Will let everyone know how they fare.

    ***UPDATE:***
    Good evening again everyone. Wanted to give an update on my friend's storm battered Plumies: Noticed the new baby branch that was in the process of growing out from the 2 main stems shriveled up & fell off. It was black at the tip & hollow inside YIKES! I tried to carve out what I could see of any residual rot in the main stem but no white sap was coming out (?). I put some fungicide on the cut & am waiting to see what happens but in all honesty I doubt this main Plumie is going to make it & I'm having second thoughts about the others. I don't like the looks of them, especially when I see black stem scars (shown in pic) where the previous leaves were before they got frost damage. 2 of the smaller ones are trying to produce dew & I do see some tiny claws but there's surface wounds on these plants too from when they were knocked over in the house by the storm surge & it's impossible to tell what's what. Oh well, only time will tell. If worse comes to worse I'll just give her some of the Plumies she gave me back in Oct. Those are doing amazingly well! Because my room is warm & faces 2 southwest windows, mine still have leaves on them with more coming. My Brug is in semi-dormancy with a few leaf tips sprouting here & there but they eventually fall off. I'm happy about it because at least I can relax a bit in caring for that potted monster lol.

    This post was edited by MissMudPuppy on Tue, Dec 11, 12 at 15:41