Jump to content

Recommended Posts

My small potted Bay Tree has started to look very Sad.


The leave are turning brown and are crispy dry but not falling off the tree.

There appears to be new leave coming but can I still use the brown ones in cooking ?


I have been watering the plant but not over watering.


How can I rescue my Bay Tree which I bought last year.

Should I remove the brown leaves. Will that allow the new leaves to grow.

They are very tiny at the moment.


Any help much appreciated. My tree was quite expensive. ?45.00


DulwichFox

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/154461-bay-tree-help/
Share on other sites

The brown leaves will have no flavour left in them unfortunately, it'll just amount to putting dead leaves in your cooking. Green-fingered Mrs H says compost loses its nutritional value over time so you should repot with fresh compost every spring if possible. Brown leaves may indicate it needs a bit more water than it's getting, apparently, and yes they should be removed to make way for new growth.

suzisoo Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Mine did the same took it round to the back garden

> and repotted trimmed off all the brown put it in a

> bigger pot and it is now flourishing.


Yes. That's what I plan to do. Pot size restricted to size of planter but I'll give a go.

Also give it a feed with edible plant feeder




Many Thanks


Fox

Seventeen years ago moved into a house with a bay tree at the bottom of the garden. It was thirty feet tall three years ago, when we realised that the neighbours felt as if they were enduring a total eclipse of the sun. So down it came. I miss it, but the back garden is the better for it... Anyhow: Put it in dirt, not in a pot or planter, and let it take off!

SpringTime Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I'd get it into the ground proper if you can. We

> had a couple that were so plagued with ants the

> pots were largely emptied of any sustinence.

> Replanting and lots of water seemed the last thing

> that might've helped, and it worked.


This is my garden I have a small strip either side of my garden.

Planting out is not an option.





Foxy

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Hello,  We have a couple of desk spaces available in our studio on Blackwater Street (just off Lordship Lane). The long desk space would be on the ground floor of the unit and shared with an Architect and 4 Landscape Designers. We are Architects and occupy the first floor level. There are 2 meeting rooms available, printer, kitchen, toilet etc. Photos are attached but please email [email protected] or call 07539039455 to arrange a viewing. Fixed desk rental is £300 / month. Daily rental can be discussed.  Thanks,  Nimi
    • Hello,  We have a desk space in our studio which is on Blackwater Street (just off Lordship Lane) SE22. It's a quiet space shared with another architect and a group of landscape designers. We are architects and on the first floor. There are a couple of meeting rooms available and a kitchen. Let me know if you'd like to arrange a viewing to hear more. For a fixed desk we would charge £300 / month + VAT. I've attached some photos but let me know if you'd like to arrange a visit.  Thanks,  Nimi
    • Better that it goes into  a brown bin where it will be processed into compost.
    • The thread was started because of uncollected trees being a potential  obstruction on pavements. They could be a problem for people in wheelchairs, with prams or with mobility issues.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...