Posted by Bennewby on June 8, 2011, 2:44 pm
Hi all.
I have recently boutght a small acer and i potted it in multipurpose
compost, i was then informed that it should be in ericaceous soil so i
reptotted it using ericaceous soil.
Now the tips of the leaves are going brown and looking a bit crispy...
Is this a result of the multipurpose compost and is there anything i can
do about it?
It is only small, probably about 12" tall.
Thanks
Ben
--
Bennewby
Posted by David E. Ross on June 8, 2011, 6:41 pm
On 6/8/11 11:44 AM, Bennewby wrote:
> Hi all.
> I have recently boutght a small acer and i potted it in multipurpose
> compost, i was then informed that it should be in ericaceous soil so i
> reptotted it using ericaceous soil.
> Now the tips of the leaves are going brown and looking a bit crispy...
> Is this a result of the multipurpose compost and is there anything i can
> do about it?
> It is only small, probably about 12" tall.
> Thanks
> Ben
>
Maples (genus Acer) prefer light, well-draining, slightly acidic soil
and relatively high humidity.
"Ericaceous soil" is merely a very fancy way of describing light,
well-draining, slightly acidic soil. It means soil suitable for plants
belonging to the Ericaceae family, the heath family.
Leaf stress generally indicates root damage. You may have over-watered
or under-watered the plant. However, it can also indicate air that is
too dry. Note that maples are NOT house plants; in your house, the air
will definitely be too dry.
--
David E. Ross
Climate: California Mediterranean, see
<http://www.rossde.com/garden/climate.html>
Gardening diary at <http://www.rossde.com/garden/diary>
Posted by Doghouse Riley on June 8, 2011, 7:30 pm
Bennewby;926024 Wrote:
> Hi all.
> I have recently boutght a small acer and i potted it in multipurpose
> compost, i was then informed that it should be in ericaceous soil so i
> reptotted it using ericaceous soil.
> Now the tips of the leaves are going brown and looking a bit crispy...
> Is this a result of the multipurpose compost and is there anything i can
> do about it?
> It is only small, probably about 12" tall.
> Thanks
> Ben
No, unless it's been very short of water, the "crispiness" is more
likely to be the action of the sun and or wind; these can dry out very
quickly in the summer. The broad leafed varieties are the most
susceptible.
Once established they're pretty tolerant of soil conditions.
This one (acer palmatum dissectum) in our garden is about 25 years old.
I put a lot of water on the garden as we have fairly sandy soil. In hot
weather the leaves get sprayed twice a day. Even then I get the odd
"crispy" leaf now and again.
[image: http://img813.imageshack.us/img813/4867/p1030628.jpg ]
--
Doghouse Riley
> I have recently boutght a small acer and i potted it in multipurpose
> compost, i was then informed that it should be in ericaceous soil so i
> reptotted it using ericaceous soil.
> Now the tips of the leaves are going brown and looking a bit crispy...
> Is this a result of the multipurpose compost and is there anything i can
> do about it?
> It is only small, probably about 12" tall.
> Thanks
> Ben
>