Post a reply

Avatar for amilfree
Feb 23, 2017 5:29 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: amil free
NYC
I'm getting brown spots on my Ficus Lyrata plant, just purchased 7 days ago. Does anyone know what this could be?
Thumb of 2017-02-23/amilgreenthumb/11857f

Not quite sure how to water it.
I get mixed info.

I mist it once a day, 2x's if it's really humid. Any thoughts?
Thank you so much!
Image
Mar 12, 2017 5:21 PM CST
Name: Will Creed
NYC
Prof. plant consultant & educator
Brown leaf spots are common on new Ficus Lyratas, usually because they are adapting to reduced light levels. These are not low light plants and they must be located in front of and close to a sunny window. Even so, expect some of eh older leaves to spot, then yellow and then fall off. New growth should be healthy and spot-free.

Lyratas do not tolerate dryness very well. If it is in its nursery pot, then a thorough watering once per week is usually about right.
Will Creed
Horticultural Help, NYC
www.HorticulturalHelp.com
Contact me directly at [email protected]
I now have a book available on indoor plant care
Avatar for njmcgill
Nov 16, 2023 7:35 PM CST

I purchased a Fiddle Leaf Ficus Lyrata recently and repotted it within days. The only place I could keep it is in my small Thank You! kitchen which has a high ceiling and two 2X4 skylights. There is no sun except in summer and the plant is not directly under it. But it is the brightest spot in the house. It has dropped about 6 leaves at the bottom with brown, almost black, spots. Will this continue to happen. After reading about the plant I will remember to water once a week.
Image
Nov 17, 2023 2:37 AM CST
Name: Al F.
5b-6a mid-MI
Knowledge counters trepidation.
Japanese Maples Deer Tropicals Seed Starter Overwinters Tender Plants Indoors Region: Michigan
Houseplants Foliage Fan Dog Lover Container Gardener Birds Wild Plant Hunter
Many species of plants shed foliage when they transition from a spot where light is high to a spot with low light levels. When leaves are shed, the process starts with resorption, during which the plant 'reclaims' valuable nutrients and other bio-compounds for use else where in the pot. As the shedding process continues, a layer forms where the leaf stem is attached to the branch, effectively walling off the leaf from the rest of the plant. Typically, this might occur with some yellowing of foliage or some necrotic areas at leaf tips/margins. That you have leaves presenting brown/black spots is pretty strong evidence more id going on that just light levels too low. You might be over-watering, in part because as more and more leaves are walled off from the plant during the shedding process, the less water the plant can/will use. Too, advice to water once per week is ill-considered. Plants should be watered on an 'as needed' basis as opposed to on a schedule. During the course of a growth cycle, appropriate intervals can easily be half as long in summer than in winter on average, and vary considerably week to week due to changing weather patterns.

You can make a simple tool from a wooden dowel rod that will, with a great deal of accuracy, show you when to water.

Using a 'tell'
Over-watering saps vitality and is one of the most common plant assassins, so learning to avoid it is worth the small effort. Plants make and store their own energy source – photosynthate - (sugar/glucose). Functioning roots need energy to drive their metabolic processes, and in order to get it, they use oxygen to burn (oxidize) their food. From this, we can see that terrestrial plants need plenty of air (oxygen) in the soil to drive root function. Many off-the-shelf soils hold too much water and not enough air to support the kind of root health most growers would like to see; and, a healthy root system is a prerequisite to a healthy plant.

Watering in small sips in order to avoid over-watering leads to a residual build-up of dissolved solids (salts) in the soil from tapwater and fertilizer solutions - which limits a plant's ability to absorb water – so watering in sips simply moves us to the other horn of a dilemma and creates another problem that requires resolution. Better, would be to simply adopt a soil that drains well enough to allow watering to beyond the saturation point, so we're flushing the soil of accumulating dissolved solids whenever we water; this, w/o the plant being forced to pay a tax in the form of reduced vitality, due to prolong periods of soil saturation. Sometimes, though, that's not a course we can immediately steer, which makes controlling how often we water a very important factor.

In many cases, we can judge whether or not a planting needs watering by hefting the pot. This is especially true if the pot is made from light material, like plastic, but doesn't work (as) well when the pot is made from heavier material, like clay, or when the size/weight of the pot precludes grabbing it with one hand to judge its weight and gauge the need for water.

Fingers stuck an inch or two into the soil work ok for shallow pots, but not for deep pots. Deep pots might have 3 or more inches of soil that feels totally dry, while the lower several inches of the soil is 100% saturated. Obviously, the lack of oxygen in the root zone situation can wreak havoc with root health and cause the loss of a very notable measure of your plant's potential. Inexpensive watering meters don't even measure moisture levels, they measure electrical conductivity. Clean the tip and insert it into a cup of distilled water and witness the fact it reads 'DRY'.

One of the most reliable methods of checking a planting's need for water is using a 'tell' (more reliable than a 'moisture meter'. You can use a bamboo skewer in a pinch, but a wooden dowel rod of about 5/16" (75-85mm) works better. They usually come 48" (120cm) long and can usually be cut in half or in several pieces, depending on how deep your pots are. Sharpen both ends of each tell in a pencil sharpener and slightly blunt the tip so it's about the diameter of the head on a straight pin. Push the wooden tell deep into the soil. Don't worry, it won't harm the root system. If the plant is quite root-bound, you might need to try several places until you find one where you can push it all the way to the pot's bottom. Leave it a few seconds, then withdraw it and inspect the tip for moisture. For most plantings, withhold water until the tell's tip comes out nearly dry. If you see signs of wilting, adjust the interval between waterings so drought stress isn't a recurring issue.

If you don't have a nutritional supplementation (fertilizing) program in place, that's something that should be addressed as it's an essential part of your plant's care regimen.

Al
* Employ your time in improving yourself by other men's writings, so that you shall gain easily what others have labored hard for. ~ Socrates
* Change might not always bring growth, but there is no growth without change.
* Mother Nature always sides with the hidden flaw.
Only the members of the Members group may reply to this thread.
  • Started by: amilfree
  • Replies: 3, views: 1,760
Member Login:

( No account? Join now! )

Today's site banner is by mcash70 and is called "Echinacea"

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.