I seem to never learn from my mistakes. Replanting plants that seem to be outgrowing their pots has always been risky business. Generally speaking, if I can keep a plant alive for 6 months, it'll last 6 years. That is, until I transplant it. Then, the difference in soil kills the plant.
This happened to my venus flytrap a few years back. It died within a few weeks of getting moved to some new peat moss.
And now it's starting to happen to my Christmas Cactus, which I transplanted for the first time this past summer. It budded, but only five flowers emerged. Leaf/branch segments on one side of the plant began dropping off. I wonder if this is the beginning of the end, or if it's just focusing it's new growth on a different part of the plant for the coming year.
I couldn't bring myself to pose the pitiful little plant for it's annual portrait. But a rare December sunlight illuminated the last flower on the plant, and out of respect for tradition, I needed to capture it's brief beauty.
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1 comment:
That is a beautiful portrait of a bloom and a nice act of defiance on the plant's part. I hope it won't be the last. I'm no expert on plants (when I had a yard, I ran a bootcamp for plants -- I knew if a plant could survive my neglect, it would thrive for years), but maybe it's time to start fresh with a few cuttings?
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