Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Cutting/plants are dying

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fespo

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Posts: 128

I have a lot of cuttings going this year and lost a few here and there but never like this. The cuttings make a lot of roots, pot them up, it does great!!!!  They make new leaves like crazy, 3-4 or so, Then all of a sudden they are wilted and dead. So far this has happen to three of my cuttings/plants. I have been watering only when needed. They are warm all day and night, in the south window and are in my family room were the wood stove is. They ARE NOT close enough to get burned from the heat. I do have a small box fan running 24/7 just like the wood stove. Any Ideas? Thanks Frank

hoosierbanana

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Posts: 2,186

If it were me I would put the 2 on the right into a higher humidity situation with less light and hope for the best. The first from left looks like a goner to me, leaves drying on the stem like that is a bad sign, I would check the roots to see what condition they are in.

hoosierbanana

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p.s. Are you using organic fertilizer?

fespo

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No fertilizer at all,

hoosierbanana

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I am stumped then.

dfoster25

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Brent:

Would Organic vrs Inorganic make a difference?

FiggyFrank

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I think the two on the right might benefit from a humidity bin myself.

JackHNVA

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Posts: 519

They need moderate to high humidity at the initial cup stage, and the room where the wood stove is is most likley too dry. Inverted cups and some TLC misting may help

strudeldog

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I would think the wood stove pulling all the humidity out of air, and the fan probably factors as well. The young roots might not be able to keep up

1FigMama

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Posts: 57

Hi Frank,

It looks to me like the soil in the far right cup is very light in color.  Is there a chance it could be too dry?  A wood stove and fan seem likely to make the environment really dry for such young cuttings.  I'd first check that the soil moisture (below the surface) is okay.  Having them in such a warm environment may be causing more water loss than the young roots are able to replace.  In any case, I agree with Brent--tent the cuttings to minimize water loss from the leaves and hope for the best.  Good luck!

garden_whisperer

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Posts: 1,613

i have had some of the same problems. great big jucey white roots great growth. then for no reason at all the roots start turning brown and leaves droop and tree dies. adding  humidity has not help mine out. some though have really grown great as well under same everything, soil light, humidity, mesured water at the same times. same under heat. just differant cuttings.

if you figure it out let me know. 

fespo

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Posts: 128

Well I put them in the humidity bin now. We will see how the ICU works.

Strudeldog, I do have a big pot of water on the stove going almost everyday. I can put out 2 gallons of water an hour if I want too. I never have the house DRY. I have a whole house of wood floors

hoosierbanana

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Dan- Organic does have peaks, if you will. Things like proteins are converted by bacteria and fungi to fertilizer salts much faster at warmer temps. And there is much less flushing when they are small.
When salt levels are high the roots are much more likely to shut down and burn as the mix dries out. You can read about me having my own crisis with that here.

Grasa

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Posts: 1,819

a very hot sunshine can also make them be that way... soil seems a bit on the wet side, I would scratch a bit on top to loosen to see. Also make sure you have draining holes.

sometimes they do come back... some take a long time.. if you don't have gnats.. you will be ok.

nkesh099

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Posts: 863

Agree with Jack (#8). Wood Stove sucks the moister out of a room/rooms. Do an experiment; have a thermometer in the room when the stove is off, record the percentage of the humidity. Then record it again after 1/2-1 hr after the stove is on. You'll see a big % drop of humidity in that particular room.

Good luck,
Navid.

Dan796

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Posts: 320

Also the fan should be near the plants, but never point the fan directly on your plants.
That sets up a dry air flow that will dry them out way too quickly, and stress them too much.
The idea is just to lightly move moist air in the area. A humdiifier would help a lot for them, and your family.

fespo

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Posts: 128

The stove is never off 100%, I burn 24/7 with the fan blowing cool air in and hot air out. As the hot air is blowing out, it picks up moisture and move over the cuttings and out of the room. I have been using this set for years and never had this problem. Here is pot of water for clean steam

nkesh099

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Posts: 863

Frank, after looking at your photos, I am sure 1) low humidity 2) High temps are the culprits here. I have a wood burning stove in my sun room, all the plants (non fig) in that room will have wilted leaves once it gets too hot in there. Even misting the leaves with water and watering those plants won't do much. Leaves will perk up for 10-15 minutes then they wilt again, some even drop their leaves. Luckily they are not figs.

Navid.

hblta

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Posts: 711

soil looks like it is pulling away from the sides of container, so looks like too dry. maybe uneven soil moisture.
I put a lot of holes in the sides of my containers, so the roots get enough air. have to water more but roots do not get drowned.

vitalucky

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Posts: 241

I had a similar problem a few years ago and could not find the reason till my father told me to scrutinize the soil.
In the soil there were very tiny flies like  organism feeding even on new roots. Some very so small I had problems seeing them. I added a chemical made to kill fire ants and another 60 garden pests and the problem was solved (but I had lost several plants already)

Rewton

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I saw this in another thread - I have no idea whether it works but is easy to try:

"Whenever you see one of your cuttings that is in a rooting cup going limp on you......put a kitchen match just barely inside of the drainage/vent holes and move it around a bit to make sure that the hole is still open for air flow. GENTLY till the top crust (surface) too with the match stick. Sometimes that is all it takes to revive a wilting cutting. It often is just a carbon dioxide venting thing........"


http://figs4funforum.websitetoolbox.com/post/Pictures-of-New-Rooting-Technique-5370584?highlight=peat+pots

penandpike

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Posts: 129

May be you should drench the plants with some fungicide, because I think a fungus is killing the roots.
I lost many plants last year just like you do now. Perhaps there is not enough fresh air in the house. Open your windows, Oxygen kills bacteria. 

fespo

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Posts: 128

I know one thing for sure, it's not fresh air. Everyday we open a window for fresh air. I bring in firewood through the window all most everyday. Last I even slept with the window open a little.

penandpike

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Posts: 129

Fresh air is never enough when the plans are inside the house! Especialy if there is a killing bacteria around.  I am sure if you leave the plants outside they will live. And drenching with findicide is a comon practice among professional propagators.
 

twobrothersgarden

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Posts: 332

I've lost a lot of figs like this. Don't know exactly why this happens, but I think it has to do with too much moisture or not enough moisture in the soil. I've been using this stuff called calcarb when they wilt, and its seems to help them out if they are not too far gone.