Glass carriage of a small carob tree

in Succulent growers2 months ago

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Before I left for our two-week absence from home, i.e. our trip, I placed almost all the plants in this corner of the balcony. Even those succulents that used to decorate the bookshelf or the TV stand have also moved to the balcony, so that they can all be together and protect each other from the sun (the bigger plants should make the shadow for the smaller ones). That is when I took this photo and sent it to a friend with a question: who will survive?

Another reason why I put them all outside is that I intended to close all the blinds in the house, that is, it would be pitch dark, and we know that plants cannot do without light. Now, two plants were left inside because they would anyway die in as much sun as there is on my balcony. I didn't have much hope that they would survive without light... but maybe I still hoped that a miracle could happen.

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The result... one completely and literally dead and the other, the orchid.. let's say it survived but since I arrived, it already lost two yellow leaves and this one is also going to fall. If it stays with at least one green leaf, there is a chance it will survive indeed.

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And what happened outside?

My friend was busy with other stuff and couldn't come to water the plants. Much of their fate depended on the rain, but you know how it is in the middle of summer in Spain. In two weeks, it rained once (which was more than expected), so at least one time they got natural water. However, I can conclude that the Jade Tree suffered from a type of sunburn and a lack of water. The big fuzzy Ruby Blush left this world (it was one of my oldest plants) and so did these little assorted succulents.

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It's fine (not that I don't feel sorry but it is kind of normal). I had more losses around a month ago when I had to throw away a couple of pots of rotten plants. Outside was too hot, inside they didn't like, or maybe I over-watered them, although I am careful with the frequency of watering. All in all, it was time to do some cleaning and repoting.

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After saying goodbye to the big Ruby Blush (I took a few green tops), I had its free white pot. I decided to use it for the Aeonium and its neighbors. A small, young carob tree also lived in that pot. I didn't plant it, at least not on purpose, but I once took soil for my plants from around a carob tree. There was probably a seed of this tree there and it just sprouted in this pot with other plants. It has been there for several years, and now I have taken it out of the soil for the first time. I was amazed at how long its root is. I wanted to plant it separately this time, so that it would grow even more and be a goal, a promise that one day I would plant it on a piece of land, on some plot.

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Probably because of the shape of this tree with its long root, I got the idea to plant it in a long, narrow container. I know that my choice can cause reactions of surprise or disapproval, because there are questions like how to take out the plant one day when it grows, that the throat is very narrow, that the glass lets light through and that algae will form...but I gave several rounds of thinking and in the end I still decided to give it a try.

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I will darken the glass or put it in a dark vase (I have already tried it with one) and when it is time to transplant the tree into the ground... I can wrap this bottle in a piece of cloth, break it and "save from the glass cage" our carob tree. It might not work. Maybe yes, if it should come true.

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In any case, yesterday afternoon I had a nice and relaxing time transplanting plants into larger pots and playing with ideas about the big future tree. Right now it is on its journey in a glass carriage, travelling to its freedom.

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Hi @mipiano, the last photo is very comforting. Those plants will grow well again. I hope you'll keep us updated on the young carob tree's journey...

Best regards.

Hi @enraizar, thanks, that is how that corner looks like now. On the other side of the balcony there is a big Aloe Vera plant, I didn't had to transplant or do anything around it so I didn't include it in my today's post. And I might drink my afternoon coffee in the balcony later, after I collect one additional copy for the important siesta collection 😆

I hope the little carob tree will like this journey and continue growing. In that case, I will do an update 😇 Thank you!!

Hi @mipiano, I'm sure you already have a beautiful new addition to your collection. I'll be waiting, without rushing, to see how that journey in the glass ship goes.

Good night. 👋🤗

I am not sure how fast carob trees grow travel in glass ships, so we will maybe have to wait without rushing indeed 😁

Thank you and good night to you too. :) 👋

 2 months ago (edited) 

Your glass bottle will fill up with roots in no time! I hope this new home materialises soon 😁 About 19 years ago, I had a lemon with some little sprouted lemon seeds inside and I planted them. Many years later, after much suffering in too-small pots, the lone survivor grows at my house and bears lemons.
I'm busy planting some rockeries that I built, we shall see what survives the hot dry spring roast weather we are about to get.

I hope so 😁 Loved this story of you and the lemon 💛, the survivor knew why it had to live! I will not forget this story of yours!

Oh, yeah, now it is your turn to bear with heat, we are slowly heading toward autumn and winter, when I hope that Aeonium will get back its splendour it had last year. Fingers crossed for your plants! 😉🤞

What a shame that some of them died... I hadn't seen that idea of putting the plant in a bottle, it looks cute haha.

Well, I hadn't seen it either, maybe because it is not a good idea at all to plant in glass bottles hahaha, but why not try things that are not common? 😂

I agree, we have to try! 😂

The corner turned out beautifully! And I assure you that if you do as you said with a cloth, it will work. The important thing is that the roots don't get any air. I was very sad about the plants that died, but sometimes that happens... You had a relaxing afternoon, which is also important. While you were doing that, I was preparing drinks, haha.

Yes, someone was preparing drinks, others were planting the survivors hahaha, and glass bottles appeared in both activities 😂
Now I have a bit more reduced plant family, oh I still have the aloe vera on the corner of the balcony... Maybe I should also try with different types of plants, like indoor plants and not just succulents. Or some mini garden, like having parsley or cherry tomato in pots? Maybe 🤷‍♀

I had a rosemary plant... but the water from the air conditioning upstairs killed it... one night it was left on... terrible. I love indoor plants!!! I don't have a terrace, so I have what little I have on a balcony, but it's all green, it makes me happy! 💗

Green colour brings some tranquillity and peace, I am glad you are happy with your green balcony 😇

Now I'm applying fertiliser and it's working... I don't have any photos right now, but I'll take some!

Qué pena que algunas no sobrevivieron, pero tal y como dices...es normal, el ciclo de la vida. Ahora tu rincón a quedado renovado y hermoso. El algarrobo podrás plantarlo en algún lugar perfecto...ya lo encontrarás 😉. Un abrazo 🤗

El ciclo de la vida, así es. El rincón es más pequeño, pues bien, se plantaran un día cosas diferentes, no pasa nada. ;) Mi amiga tiene en su campo un algarrobo que ya estaba allí, enorme cuando su bisabuela compró el terreno. Yo no podré ver ese arbol bebé así de grande si llega a tierra, pero bien, se le encontrará un lugar; quizás lo llevo a Serbia un día o no sé, aquí en España o en algún otro lugar. 😉

No lo verás, pero sí tus descendientes o personas desconocidas que se sienten a su sombra. ¿Quien sabe y quede en una parcela que alguien compre?(como el caso de tu amiga). No importa donde sea...crecerá. Lindo finde para todos 🤗.

It is a good idea to put the plant in a glass bottle because of its long roots. Have you thought about the water leakage? Would that be an obstacle if it is kept inside the bottle for a long time?

The other pot, from which I took it out, didn't have those little holes on its bottom for the water leakage, so I was not worried about that. Well, we will see how this experiment turns out. Time will tell ;)

Goodness, that's a severe sunburn on the big plant. Hope it recovers though 🤔. And that one in a bottle glass looks pretty though, once it grows, i'm curious if how its root will spread in it. I'm sure it will give a crack on the bottle. Seeing the replanted plants kinda feels good, knowing that they are fine and was given love and time again - and water i guess? Hehe

Yeah, I think that one will recover, not those that died completely though hahaha
I also think they will feel they are not abandoned, I am home and can take care of them now every day 😇 and yes, give them water 😆