Posted by Trevor Appleton on April 29, 2005, 6:32 am
I meant to post this when I received my 100 busy lizzy plugs three weeks
ago.
Last year I got them at the same time and planted them in 3 inch pots in
mult pupose with a little slow release (as I have done this year), and they
just sat there for weeks on end and never moved. It was well into summer
before some of them eventualy grew away healthily and spectaculalry whilst a
few just withereds up and died.
Looks like the same things happening this year. Where am I going wrong.
There in a bubble wrap insulated greenhouse which is frost free.
Have recently adjusted night temperature to nearer 5-7C to see if that
helps.
Posted by Emrys Davies on April 29, 2005, 9:07 am
> I meant to post this when I received my 100 busy lizzy plugs three
weeks
> ago.
> Last year I got them at the same time and planted them in 3 inch pots
in
> mult pupose with a little slow release (as I have done this year), and
they
> just sat there for weeks on end and never moved. It was well into
summer
> before some of them eventualy grew away healthily and spectaculalry
whilst a
> few just withereds up and died.
> Looks like the same things happening this year. Where am I going
wrong.
> There in a bubble wrap insulated greenhouse which is frost free.
> Have recently adjusted night temperature to nearer 5-7C to see if that
> helps.
Trevor,
It's all to do with temperature and light. Initially they are grown in
ideal conditions and then they find themselves being transported to your
greenhouse and during all of this temperatures fluctuate considerably
and the lighting and air circulation is far from ideal. Consequently
they have a shock to their system from which they find it hard to
recover.
A Max - Min thermometer will help you considerably. Try and maintain a
minimum temperature of 10ºC, but that may be costly.
Regards,
Emrys Davies.
Posted by Chris Hogg on April 29, 2005, 4:54 pm
wrote:
>> I meant to post this when I received my 100 busy lizzy plugs three
>weeks
>> ago.
>>
>> Last year I got them at the same time and planted them in 3 inch pots
>in
>> mult pupose with a little slow release (as I have done this year), and
>they
>> just sat there for weeks on end and never moved. It was well into
>summer
>> before some of them eventualy grew away healthily and spectaculalry
>whilst a
>> few just withereds up and died.
>>
>> Looks like the same things happening this year. Where am I going
>wrong.
>>
>> There in a bubble wrap insulated greenhouse which is frost free.
>>
>> Have recently adjusted night temperature to nearer 5-7C to see if that
>> helps.
>Trevor,
>It's all to do with temperature and light. Initially they are grown in
>ideal conditions and then they find themselves being transported to your
>greenhouse and during all of this temperatures fluctuate considerably
>and the lighting and air circulation is far from ideal. Consequently
>they have a shock to their system from which they find it hard to
>recover.
>A Max - Min thermometer will help you considerably. Try and maintain a
>minimum temperature of 10ºC, but that may be costly.
>Regards,
>Emrys Davies.
I agree with you Emrys. I received 120 plug gazanias in the post a few
weeks ago. The instructions said pot on immediately and keep in a
humid atmosphere at 15C. Fat chance, I thought, so I potted them up
into 2" pots and put them on the floor of the unheated G/H, as no
space on the staging.
They've been very slow to move :-(
--
Chris
E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net
Posted by Kay on April 29, 2005, 9:54 am
>I meant to post this when I received my 100 busy lizzy plugs three weeks
>ago.
>Last year I got them at the same time and planted them in 3 inch pots in
>mult pupose with a little slow release (as I have done this year), and they
>just sat there for weeks on end and never moved. It was well into summer
>before some of them eventualy grew away healthily and spectaculalry whilst a
>few just withereds up and died.
>Looks like the same things happening this year. Where am I going wrong.
Maybe nowhere. I'd expect them to apparently sit still for a while until
they establish a good root system.
--
Kay
"Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river"
Posted by Victoria Clare on April 29, 2005, 1:08 pm
>>I meant to post this when I received my 100 busy lizzy plugs three
>>weeks ago.
>>
>>Last year I got them at the same time and planted them in 3 inch pots
>>in mult pupose with a little slow release (as I have done this year),
>>and they just sat there for weeks on end and never moved. It was well
>>into summer before some of them eventualy grew away healthily and
>>spectaculalry whilst a few just withereds up and died.
>>
>>Looks like the same things happening this year. Where am I going
>>wrong.
>>
> Maybe nowhere. I'd expect them to apparently sit still for a while
> until they establish a good root system.
Mine taken from cuttings late last year are growing away like good 'uns in
the greenhouse and I've just taken a set of cuttings from them that are
already rooting.
My guesses:
a) they were grown in perfect conditions where they came from, and your
greenhouse is colder and has given them a shock.
b) they are busy lizzies, aren't they - not something tenderer like new
guinea impatiens ?
c) Assuming they are busy lizzies, maybe you have a particular tender
cultivar? Try another supplier.
Victoria
--
gardening on a north-facing hill
in South-East Cornwall
--
weeks
> ago.
> Last year I got them at the same time and planted them in 3 inch pots
in
> mult pupose with a little slow release (as I have done this year), and
they
> just sat there for weeks on end and never moved. It was well into
summer
> before some of them eventualy grew away healthily and spectaculalry