My hawthoria is dying, will I be able to save it? If so, how?
7 years ago
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- 7 years ago
- 7 years ago
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Can I save my dying Orchid!?
Comments (4)Also, if this helps, I've had it in a pot that had fish tank rocks (no dirt or moss or anything), but I assumed that might have been making it too wet? So I transplanted it recently into another pot that has the bark mixture for orchids. I've had it in an office with a skylight for the past year and have gotten 2-3 new leaves, but that's about it....See MoreHelp! I think my succulents may be dying! Can I save them?!
Comments (17)You need to get them growing properly first before thinking of what you do with them at a later stage. If you are new to this, best keep them individually potted as they are different types, you can always group pots in a container and cover rims with stones for a group look! Whether they will pull round remains to be seen as they look pretty damaged at the moment. You won't be able to buy a soil off the shelf, sadly no one sems to sell anything that resembles a good fast draining mix, that's why we need the separate ingredients to mix together. Gill...See MorePlease Help Save my Dying Yucca SOS
Comments (4)Is it a yucca elephantipes? never water until you see new growth after re potting anything. They share the same growing conditions as succulents in the north. watering in winter once or twice a month. They need lots and lots of light, south-west facing window is best. Anything less they will struggle. Yes as mentioned photos will help....See MoreCan I save my dying new grass?
Comments (8)Water would be the only thing I'd add now. I don't see your location, so I can't see the grass type, but don't feed. You did the right thing six weeks ago, but right now, the grass doesn't want dinner. It already had a nice lunch and dinner is some time away yet. Spring seedings on northern lawns are very difficult and it looks like you did the best job possible. Unfortunately, that hot week did damage. Right now, water. Water. Water. If it doesn't rain, water every other day or every third day...ridiculous under any other circumstance, but in this case, required. And do it in the morning so the grass' blades are dry by nightfall. You want the soil damp but not soaking wet at any time, so that schedule may need to change depending on your sprinkler and the circumstances and location in the lawn--it's just a guideline and I'm also not specifying a time period of watering for that reason. The goal, ultimately, would be about an inch of water a week regardless of how you put it down. For reference, a tuna can is just about an inch deep. If anything is going to bring it back, that will. And unfortunately, once back, you're going to have to keep up the watering until the weather cools off. Now that was for northern grass. If you have a southern grass like Bermuda, please let us know and I'll delete what I just said because it's not as proper as it should be. :-)...See More- 7 years ago
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