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Flamboyant leaves yellowing and falling

Discussion in 'Tropical Gardening' started by Liamesque, Aug 23, 2015.

  1. Liamesque

    Liamesque Apprentice Gardener

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    Hello all ! :-)

    Ever since I repotted my red Flamboyant tree from its original pot to a bigger pot, its bottom branches lose their leaves after yellowing (with brown spots) - photo link below...

    The tree is still growing well, sprouting new branches regularly, but the yellowing, falling leaves are worrying me.

    I'm in the south of France so I need to water the pot regularly but I try not to over water either...

    I'm thinking my substrate mix is wrong. I added compost with fertilizer when I changed pots - maybe the mix is too rich...

    What mix would you suggest?
    Compost + earth + sand mix? Gravel too?
    Any advice would be great - I don't want to make a mistake in my efforts to save this beautiful young tree..

    [​IMG]
     

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  2. pete

    pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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    Not a plant I've ever been very successful with so cant help much.
    I know it needs high light levels and possibly a tropical climate, you might stand a better chance than me being in Southern France.
    That leaf problem I have had, and seen before, in other similar related plants eg, Sesbania puncea.

    Not worked out what actually causes it, you could look very closely at the undersides of the leaves with a lense, it could be Red Spider Mite.

    Or it could just be down to unsuitable growing gonditions.
    Maybe the repot stopped the roots growing.

    Were there new white roots forming when you repotted? Or was the rootball dormant?
     
  3. Liamesque

    Liamesque Apprentice Gardener

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    Thanks Pete.
    Looking closely at the leaves but can't see if it's animal or chemical...
    The root ball was dormant (repotted in autumn)...
     
  4. pete

    pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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    Yep, so its been repotted since last year??
    Has it made any real growth this year??
     
  5. pete

    pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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    Looking at the pics again.
    are you sure its Flamboyant tree, ie. Delonix regia.
    The leaves dont look right.

    It really reminds me of Sesbania
     
  6. longk

    longk Total Gardener

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    Not a good choice for pot growing. Possible causes are cool nights compared to the daytime temps, drying out, RSM or lack of nutrients (it grows best with plenty of organic material to simulate the forest floor conditions of its native habitat).

    I grew one and by the sounds of it had as much luck as Pete. Caesalpinia is easier but not an alternative if Delonix is what you want.
     
  7. Liamesque

    Liamesque Apprentice Gardener

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    It's Delonix alright.
    Daytime 25 to 35°C, night time 20 to 25 on average.
    It's been growing steadily since springtime and has doubled in height since last year (about 60 cm grown this year). Yes, repotted in the Autumn last year.
    New branches sprouting every week!
    But yellowing leaves with brown spots on lowest branch (which I usually prune off once it is bare)...
    I'll be planting it in the ground next February (when our house is finished being built)... Until then trying to keep it healthy in a pot.
     
  8. pete

    pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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    The Delonix I grew had tripinnate leaves.

    Yours appears to be bipinnate

    I know you are in the S. France, but I dont think the winters would be warm enough for Delonix.
    But I could be wrong.:smile:
     
  9. Liamesque

    Liamesque Apprentice Gardener

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    We're hoping so much that it will survive and flower here in the Mediterranean area. My wife has Mauritian roots and the red flamboyants are majestic over there!
    We're going to plant it south-facing.
    We'll give it all the love it needs hehe
    But we want to be sure about the substrate mix (is that the term?)
    Pozzolane + compost + earth from the new garden...
     
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    • Liamesque

      Liamesque Apprentice Gardener

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      I've never seen a Flamboyant (Delonix Regia) with tripinnate leaves Pete, but I'm no expert...
      Yes, it goes down to zero (celcius) maybe 2 or 3 nights per Winter season. I hope "she" will survive it if I cover the trunk and vase through the winter like I do with our other more tropical plants (banana tree, mango tree...)
       
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      • shiney

        shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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        Can't help with the problem but I've been looking at all my pictures of flamboyant, from different parts of the world, and they're all bipinnate.

        P1190337.JPG
         
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        • pete

          pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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          OK, perhaps I got it wrong about the leaves then.

          God knows what I was trying to grow:scratch::snork:
           
        • shiney

          shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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          Been there, done that!!!! :lunapic 130165696578242 5:
           
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