Here is and photo of the cactus. It seems right except for the bottom wich looks like drying up.
Also I got this fenestraria 3 weeks ago, and searched that they don't need much water, only once a month. So since then I only watered once, could it be that it needs more water? I currently don't have it on direct sunlight. Could it be that it needs direct sunlight?
Do you think it can survive?
All comments are apreciated, thanks.
Fenestraria drying, What can I do to save it?
Re: Fenestraria drying, What can I do to save it?
Have a look through this thread http://www.cactiguide.com/forum/viewtop ... 12&t=29625" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: Fenestraria drying, What can I do to save it?
That's some usefull information, thank you very muchIvan C wrote:Have a look through this thread http://www.cactiguide.com/forum/viewtop ... 12&t=29625" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Acording to the information of the thread, the person who was caring it, before I bought it, gave it to much water. Because it was already cracked in lot of leaves. So I decided to check out the roots, and they are rotten, hopefully I can still save it.
- greenknight
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Re: Fenestraria drying, What can I do to save it?
It's supposed to be able to grow from leaf cuttings, maybe you should try that with some of the leaves.
Spence
Re: Fenestraria drying, What can I do to save it?
Mesembs very rarely grow successfully from leaf cuttings. I've never seen it. You need a bit of stem, although any tiny bit is sufficient.
When you get one that isn't rotten, they need direct sunlight, good ventilation, and very little water. They grow best when it is cool at night, below 50F or even below 40F, and they generally don't do well as indoor plants. Only watering once a month probably isn't a good idea. They can certainly survive for a month without water, but will do much better with light watering every few days and deeper watering every few weeks when the plant is in growth. All this assumes you have a suitable soil with excellent drainage, because as you found they will quickly rot in soggy soil.
When you get one that isn't rotten, they need direct sunlight, good ventilation, and very little water. They grow best when it is cool at night, below 50F or even below 40F, and they generally don't do well as indoor plants. Only watering once a month probably isn't a good idea. They can certainly survive for a month without water, but will do much better with light watering every few days and deeper watering every few weeks when the plant is in growth. All this assumes you have a suitable soil with excellent drainage, because as you found they will quickly rot in soggy soil.
--ian
- greenknight
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- Joined: Tue Apr 30, 2013 4:18 am
- Location: SW Washington State zone 8b
Re: Fenestraria drying, What can I do to save it?
If there's any stem left that isn't rotten, you'll have a much better chance of saving something, certainly. I would remove anything that's rotten. If there's anything left, maybe it will grow.
I suggested trying leaf cuttings only because it doesn't look likely that there's any sound stem left.
I suggested trying leaf cuttings only because it doesn't look likely that there's any sound stem left.
Spence