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Need help with Fargesia rufa bamboo

Discussion in 'NEW Gardeners !' started by shrimp, Jun 17, 2020.

  1. shrimp

    shrimp Apprentice Gardener

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    I've never had bamboo plants but I've gone and bought 3 pots of fargesia rufa plants online but they don't look healthy as the stems are yellow and there's a lot of white on the stems and I found some orange/brown bugs. So my plan is to repot them from the 9cm pots but what compost should I use and what size pot and how much water should I give them and should I add fertilizer. If the white on the stems is from bugs will spraying them with soapy water get rid of them.
     
  2. NigelJ

    NigelJ Total Gardener

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    I'd put them into 25cm pots with a John Innes 3 compost. Over summer I would water when the top couple of inches of compost feels dry and feed once a month.
    Pictures of bugs would help possibly scale insect though. The white might be from the bamboo as some have a white powder on the stems that gradually comes away .
     
  3. shrimp

    shrimp Apprentice Gardener

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    Before I washed the white from the stem/new shots it looked liked a white webbed powder. I've had a look on google and the bug looks like a Palmicultor lumpurensis. I have john innes 3 but I only have a 17cm pot so when I repot do I need to put gravel in the bottom of the pot and should I remove all the old soil from the roots. When I feed it what would you recommend as I have bonemeal,growmore, blood fish & bone.
    worm.jpg Yellow stems.jpg
     
  4. NigelJ

    NigelJ Total Gardener

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    Where abouts are you? Is Palmicultor lumpurensis actually found in the UK? I see it is a pest in Florida and Asia and has been found in Padua, but I couldn't see a reference for occurrence in the UK. You could email the Natural History Museum and ask them.
    I was thinking of feeding with Miraclegro or Phostrogen once a month as a liquid feed.
    You could mix some blood fish and bone in with the JI3 and then top dress yearly, I don't think you need to put gravel in the base. If you cannot see bugs on the roots then I wouldn't remove the old soil.
    Interesting that the bug is on the fence and not the bamboo, wonder what it's up to. If a tropical pest it might not like our climate.
     
  5. shrimp

    shrimp Apprentice Gardener

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    Do you think the bug is a Palmicultor lumpurensis? I'm from wales. I ordered the plant from a nursery in england. I took the bug off the bamboo and put it on the fence to take a photo.
     
  6. NigelJ

    NigelJ Total Gardener

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    I would be surprised if it was Palmicultor lumpurensis, but I'm no expert on insects. You could try getting the largest clearest picture you can and posting it here https://www.ispotnature.org/add/observation or contact Local Entomology group, the Natural History Museum or you could try The National Botanic Garden Of Wales.
    How many of them are there and are they increasing?
     
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    • Mike Allen

      Mike Allen Total Gardener

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      Fair bit of info on the net. Just search. Palmicultor lumpurensis
       
    • flounder

      flounder Super Gardener

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      Pretty much what you've described is a mealy bug Balanococcus kwoni, or it could be an armoured bamboo scale insect, which latin name escapes me. Try spraying with a soapy washing up liquid twice a week until you've got rid of them and feed monthly up until September with a weak nitrogen feed.
      I do put my grass cuttings around the bottom of a few of my fargesias, as a nitrogen boost
       
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      • NigelJ

        NigelJ Total Gardener

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        Search under @flounder s name for the bug throws up
        Pests with a good picture of it.
         
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        • shrimp

          shrimp Apprentice Gardener

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          I've had a look at the pictures and it looks more like a
          armoured bamboo scale Insect, Kuwanaspis pseudoleucaspis. I asked the place where I bought the plant and they said if it's a palmicultor lumpurensis use a systemic pesticide. I cannot see anymore but when I get up in the morning the leaves have white marks on and today it looked like a cobweb coming out the soil.
           
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