- Sat Nov 09, 2024 2:38 pm
#457880
Hi,
My D. capensis "orange sherbet" only opens its new leaves about halfway. The lower half looks fuzzy and has some dew, but the top half is still a thin, pointy, and often still folded over. It has been here about a month, and it was doing better than this previously.
I also have a regular cape sundew, which has a 2-3 inch baby plant, plus two teeny babies which both have eaten a gnat or fruit fly. All of these appear to have normal leaves that open fully. Also its blooming right now. Both plants are in the same location with the same light conditions (window + grow lights on a 12-hour timer). Both have eaten but the regular one caught a lot more gnats initially due to getting here first.
The one thing for both these guys, is they had a tray lined with glass. With the weird leaves developing, I checked the TDS in the tray, and it was much higher than I would expect, despite never giving them tap water (I also verify the water going in is at zero, and I just put it in their tray, not watering from the top). So I checked run-through water and both were appallingly high. I was able to flush them through to reduce it. The regular D. capensis got to a decent level. The lowest I could get the orange one was still a bit above 100. Due to that, I have since repotted it, but this was all just recently, so too soon to see if that will fix it. It does have new growth coming forth, with new leaves forming and it still catches fruities on the open parts of the leaves.
I'm not sure if the stunted leaves could be from too much minerals? Or some other factor? It is cool on their shelf currently, but the other plant is not having this issue at all. Still, I wonder if it's too cold for it? I now have each plant in an individual plastic dish so I can monitor things. Since repotting, the dish water for the orange sundew is staying at zero or low single digits. Water left in the otherwise empty glass lined tray has slowly climbing TDS, which happens again if I change out the water so it appears something is leaching from it.
Any suggestions would be welcome!
My D. capensis "orange sherbet" only opens its new leaves about halfway. The lower half looks fuzzy and has some dew, but the top half is still a thin, pointy, and often still folded over. It has been here about a month, and it was doing better than this previously.
I also have a regular cape sundew, which has a 2-3 inch baby plant, plus two teeny babies which both have eaten a gnat or fruit fly. All of these appear to have normal leaves that open fully. Also its blooming right now. Both plants are in the same location with the same light conditions (window + grow lights on a 12-hour timer). Both have eaten but the regular one caught a lot more gnats initially due to getting here first.
The one thing for both these guys, is they had a tray lined with glass. With the weird leaves developing, I checked the TDS in the tray, and it was much higher than I would expect, despite never giving them tap water (I also verify the water going in is at zero, and I just put it in their tray, not watering from the top). So I checked run-through water and both were appallingly high. I was able to flush them through to reduce it. The regular D. capensis got to a decent level. The lowest I could get the orange one was still a bit above 100. Due to that, I have since repotted it, but this was all just recently, so too soon to see if that will fix it. It does have new growth coming forth, with new leaves forming and it still catches fruities on the open parts of the leaves.
I'm not sure if the stunted leaves could be from too much minerals? Or some other factor? It is cool on their shelf currently, but the other plant is not having this issue at all. Still, I wonder if it's too cold for it? I now have each plant in an individual plastic dish so I can monitor things. Since repotting, the dish water for the orange sundew is staying at zero or low single digits. Water left in the otherwise empty glass lined tray has slowly climbing TDS, which happens again if I change out the water so it appears something is leaching from it.
Any suggestions would be welcome!
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weird leaves 2.jpg (450.24 KiB) Viewed 421 times
weird leaves 1.jpg (350.39 KiB) Viewed 421 times