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RE: I Don't Speak Avocado, Do You?

in #gardening7 years ago

hello dear friend @ englishtchrivy how are you
You know that these are not indoor plants, because they require a lot of light, they can be indoors only in the winter, so I recommend that you change it and place it closer to the window or a door to receive direct light. , another thing you can do is add some more compost and finally make the test and give with mineral water without chlorine, maybe your water has a lot of chlorine.
estero that these three councils serve much
I wish you a beautiful weekend

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you're so right @jlufer
they're not
I can't add compost in its pot not with the risk of bugs in the house

as for our water here, I think only in The Netherlands can you actually drink pure water from the tap
it's perfectly clean
I don't think we have chlorine in our drinking water and this one only gets tap water
or old tea but after this happened I haven't given it any tea drink
btw, the tea drink is always given to it cold :D

thank you for the suggestion though

@jlufer:

maybe im stoned but huh?

these are not indoor plants, because they require a lot of light, they can be indoors only in the winter

How can they be indoor in the winter (When here in the winter there is even less light)When you say they require a lot of light??

No offence though i just like to understand what im reading :)

Hi guys! I don't really know if avocado trees can hibernate during winter (It's a tropical plant), so the correct explanation is that you are going to have a hard time during winter either you can get it indoors or if you leave it outside! The correct term for plants "powering up" isn't just sunlight, it's also heat. So, if you decide to move or not the plant indoors, the approach has to be to keep it warm and moisted enough (if you can do so) in order to allow the plant to keep growing without entering an hibernation mode*. I will try to elaborate better (english isn't my first language) in a comment below. I do "speak avocado" a lot, and I've been studying and learning how they grow at least for 5 years now. Cheers!

*I don't know, if someone actually states that avocado trees can indeed hibernate.

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I have a bunch of very young avocado plants with many leaves as big as my head, and I use a special trick or a couple in order to obtain that result. Growing them into pots, and a special method I'm currently developing by myself. It involves the correct understanding of how sunlight, humidity, air and soil are involved in a plant's growth.

hi @steamdan, thank you for all your comments
they're quite a lot !

I think I agree that it's the draining capacity of the soil indeed
We had avocado trees in my granpa's house and it even survived days of floods after huge tropical storm so perhaps it's not the watering. Anyhow, I'm letting it thirst as I poked the soil and it seems harder after apr. 20cm so it must be solid at the bottom therefore, it needs getting its soil replaced

good luck with all your avocados and I hope you take good care of them and they fruit eventually. This one's almost 6 years old if I calculated right.

Thank you! I hope the avocado adventures never end! Same to you, hopefully we all will be able to grow stronger after rough times. You also taked about something quite important, the usefulness of communication, and even with a plant you can share not only opinions but empathic thoughts and emotions. So, kudos to you for bringing people together to share, learn and to help!

I took another reading at your post, just in case I left out anything you said, and I think I can give you one more trick. Get vaseline and a small/medium size brush and apply it carefully, painting with a thin layer everything from the trunk, branches and leaves (only the upside part), the more you do a good job around the sprouts the better. Make sure it doesn't get too sticky though, just an even and thin layer will do the trick. You will notice inmediately how everything painted will look brighter and brought to life, and that helps the plant against its dehydration. After giving it a little more thought I think that besides the soil, you also need to understand how humidity functions around a plant. In the case of an avocado, everything has to be moisted enough (even the air), and the vaseline will help with everything above the soil, it will be now up to you to figure how to fix the soil, remember that an avocado root system is super fragile and if you stress it enough the plant will die, so you shouldn't make any aocado plant strive too long for water, just keep the humidity levels at a friendly zone for them (Here I try to water them even twice or three times a day, and where you have this one may be as dry as my climate). I only recommend for an avocado to be transplanted when your going to a much bigger pot or space in the ground. but without damaging or pressing in any way its roots! You have to be very careful about that, I have lost many avocado plants because of that lack of humidity and a concrete-like pressed soil. The vaseline will help to make the plant a lot stronger from the ground up, but the roots are another story, so, the best of luck with that. Hope you can do this trick and if you need some asistance I can maybe record a clip and post it, or upload a couple of more pics. Take care and happy growing!