How to save my cordyline?

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Posted by Ultranol on April 25, 2010, 1:11 pm
 
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Hello everyone,

I have recently acquired a garden so thought I would try my hand for the
first
time at gardening. I got a cordyline, but it appears to be dying -
the leaves
are turning brown and dying even now that it is warmer.

I have attached a photo (it actually looks worse in real life - all the
leaves
have some brown on them, and a look are really drooping) - can
anyone offer any
advice? The tree is in a mostly sunny area of the
garden and I have been
watering it every couple of days...its been going
brown since I got it about a
month ago.

Thanks in advance.


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--
Ultranol


Posted by Fred Williams on April 25, 2010, 8:22 pm
 

Ultranol wrote:

This may help.. http://www.cordyline.org/

http://www.cordyline.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id &Itemid(
see "Growing Cordylines"

Fred


Posted by gardenlen on April 26, 2010, 2:10 pm
 

g'day ultranol,

so far it is only the older leaves tht are dying. but it looks to me
as if it is root bound or could be and the plant is suffering lack of
nutrients, so under these conditions it will shed leaves to try and
create a balance.

that pot is a little small for the stature of the plant, so simply buy
a bigger pot and pot it on adding in some good slow release
fertiliser, be sure to use a good grade potting mix.

alternatively of course if you need to keep it in that size pot? tip
the plant from the pot, cut off app 1/4 of 2 opposing sides of teh
root ball, and cut off 1/4 to 1/3 off the bottom of teh root ball then
repot it adding new potting mix into teh bottom first then the sides
tamp the mix down a bit i use my fingers to prevent as much settling
as possible.

the best method now is to stand pot in a container that will hold
enough water to go to the top of the pot not over and let it soak for
up to 24hours, keeping topping the water up to keep the height in the
pot a soil level.

they do like full sun and will handle drought conditions when planted
in the garden so you can let the pot dry a little between waterings,
but give it good sun.

when i do any potting of plants i always tamp the mix down so it
doesn't settle as much no setlement at all is fine for me.

keep us informed please

On Sun, 25 Apr 2010 13:11:59 -0400, Ultranol
snipped
--

len

With peace and brightest of blessings,

"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

http://www.lensgarden.com.au/