Posted by noel888 on March 22, 2010, 6:37 pm
I've had this beautiful C C for over 10 years in a hanging basket. On
occasions in the past and most recently last year or so, I rejuvenated
the soil by adding more fresh soil at the bottom. This Winter, I've
noticed that the leaves are getting shrivel looking, that one touches
it, its like getting paper thin and wrinkly. It has never failed
blooming for me around Christmas time at that.. Does anyone know why
this happened and can it be saved?
Posted by despen on March 22, 2010, 8:51 pm
> I've had this beautiful C C for over 10 years in a hanging basket. On
> occasions in the past and most recently last year or so, I rejuvenated
> the soil by adding more fresh soil at the bottom. This Winter, I've
> noticed that the leaves are getting shrivel looking, that one touches
> it, its like getting paper thin and wrinkly. It has never failed
> blooming for me around Christmas time at that.. Does anyone know why
> this happened and can it be saved?
I believe our CC are at least 10 years old and still going strong.
I never messed with the soil.
Sounds like under watering.
I know from experience they can dry out _a lot_ and stay alive but they
shrivel up a bit.
I usually water every 5 days or so.
Posted by Phisherman on March 22, 2010, 10:46 pm
wrote:
>I've had this beautiful C C for over 10 years in a hanging basket. On
>occasions in the past and most recently last year or so, I rejuvenated
>the soil by adding more fresh soil at the bottom. This Winter, I've
>noticed that the leaves are getting shrivel looking, that one touches
>it, its like getting paper thin and wrinkly. It has never failed
>blooming for me around Christmas time at that.. Does anyone know why
>this happened and can it be saved?
Chirstmas cactus will begin to shrivel if too little water is given,
usually starting on one branch. A little shrivel is ok when the plant
is at rest after a bloom. But, the fastest way to kill it is to
overwater it with the pot resting in a saucer full of water. I water
mine well once a week, sometimes twice a month if cool.
> occasions in the past and most recently last year or so, I rejuvenated
> the soil by adding more fresh soil at the bottom. This Winter, I've
> noticed that the leaves are getting shrivel looking, that one touches
> it, its like getting paper thin and wrinkly. It has never failed
> blooming for me around Christmas time at that.. Does anyone know why
> this happened and can it be saved?