Quote:
Originally Posted by estación seca
When did you repot it? I wouldn't repot a Neo in winter, only during warm weather when I see new root tips.
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I repotted all of my Neos on March 31 of this year, when it was in the 70s.
Quote:
Originally Posted by estación seca
If the old medium was so truly rotten I had to remove it, I would leave then plant bare-root over the winter, giving water only occasionally on warm days.
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The old medium wasn't rotten nor was it rotting. The plant was running out of space in the pot it was in with bark, and I had a bunch of plastic Neo pots and the rankake I wanted to use.
Quote:
Originally Posted by estación seca
Don't use fungicide unless you know which fungus is attacking a plant, and that fungus is susceptible to the fungicide you picked. Various fungicides don't work on every fungus.
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Fair, but what fungus could it be if it is in fact fungus?
Quote:
Originally Posted by estación seca
Rotting of plants is rarely due to fungus attacking a previously healthy plant. It's almost always caused by inadequate growing conditions. Fungicide is not the answer; it's improving growing conditions.
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I checked last night and this morning and it seems like any issues are at those two leaves only. The stem is fine, the roots look fine, the plant has kept all of the keikis and none of the keikis look effected. Nothing is mushy or soft, it's just those two leaves. It could be nothing, but I don't want to take any chances.
To clarify culture, I've done everything in my power to prevent these plants from being over-watered. I'm not soaking the mounds, I'm just watering to where the roots turn green and the mounds get moist. The mounds roughly dry out fully after a day or every other day. It's getting warmer and humid here, tomorrow will be a high of 89 degrees Fahrenheit.
The worst I can say any of the Neos have been through is there was a surprise cold front early this month that also brought rain, but the mounds didn't stay wet from the rain for long. The coldest it got at nights was 41 degrees Fahrenheit, but that was a few days after the rain and all of the mounds were getting to dry. The only other thing is some of the Neos, this Myeonggwanggae included, got a little bit
too much direct sun for a few days, this Myeonggwanggae especially so on the side where the two yellowing leaves are.
This Myeonggwanggae is the
only plant with issues like this. Again, I will say, so far whatever it is seems to be contained to the leaves. The stem and the rest of the leaves are firm, the roots look fine (it's even starting to branch off new roots from existing ones), all the the keikis don't look effect and they're also growing out their leaves more. Maybe I caught it early, but, again, I'm not taking chances.