Plumeria rooting failure
Kimberly Berg
4 years ago
last modified: 4 years ago
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Kimberly Berg
4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agoRelated Discussions
Can a plumeria survive root rot?
Comments (8)I haven't had this problem, but if it were me, I would take the plumeria out of the pot and wash any dirt off the root ball. Then, using a clean knife (X-Acto or you could sterilize a pair of small scissors with isopropyl alcohol), I would carefully cut off any roots that looked obviously rotten - brown and mushy. When you have the plant out of the pot, gently make sure that the lowest part of the stem isn't soft or rotten. It will probably look brown, since it's been sitting in soil, and it might seem slightly softer if the soil has been wet, so check for really obvious mushy spots. I would then repot in very well-draining mix, and put the plant in filtered sun. I would wait to water for a week or so, and when I did water, I would add hydrogen peroxide to the water. This post by Al explains the right concentration of H2O2 to use for the amount of water. http://forums2.gardenweb.com/forums/load/contain/msg041148327553.html You can just use the 3% hydrogen peroxide that they carry at the drugstore in the first aid aisle, and mix that in with the water you use for your plants. Hydrogen peroxide helps aerate the roots, and will actively prevent root rot. After you repot, keep an eye on the plant. It will probably act stressed, but should recover. Keep it in filtered sun, and try and leave it alone. It sounds to me like you might be having a problem with too-wet soil, which either means your soil mix is too heavy, your pots don't drain well, or that you're watering too often. You never want plumeria roots to sit in soggy soil. What soil mix are you planting in? How often do you water? What pots are your plants in? If the lowest part of the stem is rotten, you'll have to cut off the bottom part and re-root....See MorePlumeria cutting not rooting
Comments (6)My Plumeria rooted within 2 weeks. I was astonished at how fast it had a deep hold in the soil. If it hasn't rooted by now in damp soil, then I would remove the cutting and allow it to dry before planting it again. It only needs a little bit of water. Make sure to use rooting hormone to be on the safe side. The only thing that I can think of that I really did different was putting a light really close to the growth points at the top. The leaves start out as these small green bumps at the top of the stem, and within a few days they were already starting to grow. If it is not too late, I would try that. But be warned, rooting is the easy part. The leaves are very sensitive to temperature drops. One day in the low 50s with my windows open made it loose all its leaves. Hope this helps because these are really cool plants if you can get them to take....See MoreNeed advice for my rooting Plumerias
Comments (9)If I were you, I'd get another larger cutting. But being that you are so intent on making what you have work, I would cut a sliver until cut area looks white. Dip it in root hormone and let the wound air dry out for a day or two. Then insert in moist, not dripping wet, perlite and wait. Your cutting appears to have beginnings of rot plus the reddish stuff is a kind of fungus that is very aggressive. If you slice until "white" it is possible you'd end up with a 2-3" cutting and that certainly won't be successful. I don't discourage you from trying, lessons are usually best learned in the face of failure. Good that you have a clear container but if you cannot see the roots through the perlite, then obviously you don't have any root action. It is almost always fatal to disturb plant during rooting process. When you can CLEARLY see roots through perlite then it's safe to move cutting to a soil based medium. Not a minute before, and that process takes 6-8 weeks, depending on cutting and depending on whether cultivar is easy or hard to propagate to begin with. and a final comment re: cuttings. There is strength in numbers. Try rooting more than one if possible. Sometimes despite of One's best effort, cuttings don't take root. It is demoralizing, even to experienced propagators. You can always give your extras away or sell or whatever....See MoreHow to root LARGE Plumeria cuttings in a container? HELP!!
Comments (4)Hi I copied and pasted your question series below and answers to the best of my knowledge: 1. It's a fairly large cutting, and the inner stem is quite woody. Would it root? -It will likely root as thicker and older branches root better, but give it a bit longer 2. The top part of it branches into 4 individual branches which have been chopped off to keep it manageable. Should I seal (the open wounds) off using candlewax or turmeric (I've heard it's a natural fungicide) or should I let it open and let it callous on it own? -I would just leave it alone, leave it open to air 3. The temperature here (India) is very hot and dry, it might start getting a bit humid from now onwards (pressumption based on June being the onset of monsoon here). So, should I cover the top ends of the cutting using a plastic bag (then tied to the trunk) to retain the moisture? -Leave it open, wrapping it may keep too much moisture and cause rot 4. How often should I water it, since it's a fairly large container and the cutting has been sitting a few inches above the base of the pot? -Fast draining as you stated, your soil should be fine for a full soak... I would only wet the potting media once, then not water until I see leaves. 5. I have one more cutting that has sheared off from a mature tree and is roughly as thick as the one in the picture. This cutting has been broken off, so about 3/4th of it is exposed bark and exposed sheared wood. Should I cut this exposed wood off and then pot it (clean cut part in the ground) or should I let it be? -Not sure how this one will turn out. I would just cut below the sheared section and try to root the stubby remaining piece, the exposed wood will end up rotting or dying anyway. Hope this helps and good luck.. -s...See MoreKimberly Berg
4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agoKawagoe(Home of SF 49ers Santa Clara CA)
4 years agoKimberly Berg thanked Kawagoe(Home of SF 49ers Santa Clara CA)Kimberly Berg
4 years agophalanx_viridis
4 years agolast modified: 4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agoKawagoe(Home of SF 49ers Santa Clara CA)
4 years agoKimberly Berg thanked Kawagoe(Home of SF 49ers Santa Clara CA)Kawagoe(Home of SF 49ers Santa Clara CA)
4 years agoKimberly Berg thanked Kawagoe(Home of SF 49ers Santa Clara CA)Kimberly Berg
4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years agolast modified: 4 years agoKimberly Berg
4 years ago
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