apizzimenti
Seedling
Hello all – I am in need of some specific advice.
A bit of backstory: I have had a chinese elm bonsai for about six months. It was ~5 years old when I received it (as a gift), although I am experienced in indoor gardening, have done my homework on the chinese elm, and have cared for other bonsai quite successfully in the past. I live in Washington, DC and keep my chinese elm in an extremely bright south-facing window (with a grow-light for dimmer days) in a humid room in the apartment; it has an appropriately balanced soil mixture, I water when needed, and generally just give the tree as much space as possible to grow healthily. It grew quite a bit over the summer and into the early fall and, as expected, leaves began to drop for the winter en masse about last week when the lowest-light and coldest days started to hit. Leaf loss and less growth aren't my concern here.
Last night, my partner and I were preparing to drive home for the holiday, and I watered some of my houseplants and my bonsai at the same time using a simple method: place the potted plants into a tub and fill the tub until the bottoms of the pots are completely submerged, and let the plants take up the water they need. I've used this method somewhat regularly when my plants' individual watering schedules line up nicely or I need to give them all some water at the same time. Well, in the hustle to finish packing, I left the plants in the tub not for ~30 minutes, but for a few hours. Once I finally remembered and went to check on the plants, I immediately noticed the leaves of my tree blackening, when they'd been green only an hour before. (In the images below, all the blackened leaves were completely green. These pictures were taken ~30 hours after I removed the pot from the water.)
While I'd like to think that I know what to do, I don't. And I'm panicking. So, to help figure out what to do, I have a few questions:
Thank you!
A bit of backstory: I have had a chinese elm bonsai for about six months. It was ~5 years old when I received it (as a gift), although I am experienced in indoor gardening, have done my homework on the chinese elm, and have cared for other bonsai quite successfully in the past. I live in Washington, DC and keep my chinese elm in an extremely bright south-facing window (with a grow-light for dimmer days) in a humid room in the apartment; it has an appropriately balanced soil mixture, I water when needed, and generally just give the tree as much space as possible to grow healthily. It grew quite a bit over the summer and into the early fall and, as expected, leaves began to drop for the winter en masse about last week when the lowest-light and coldest days started to hit. Leaf loss and less growth aren't my concern here.
Last night, my partner and I were preparing to drive home for the holiday, and I watered some of my houseplants and my bonsai at the same time using a simple method: place the potted plants into a tub and fill the tub until the bottoms of the pots are completely submerged, and let the plants take up the water they need. I've used this method somewhat regularly when my plants' individual watering schedules line up nicely or I need to give them all some water at the same time. Well, in the hustle to finish packing, I left the plants in the tub not for ~30 minutes, but for a few hours. Once I finally remembered and went to check on the plants, I immediately noticed the leaves of my tree blackening, when they'd been green only an hour before. (In the images below, all the blackened leaves were completely green. These pictures were taken ~30 hours after I removed the pot from the water.)
While I'd like to think that I know what to do, I don't. And I'm panicking. So, to help figure out what to do, I have a few questions:
- Are these effects the result of overwatering? (My guess is yes, but any more detail would be greatly appreciated.) I noticed (as in the second image) that there is some white splotching on some of the leaves – what is that, and is it possibly causing this problem?
- What do I do? I have seen an incredible number of online sources telling me how to diagnose overwatering, but very few on how to treat it. As of now, I've moved the tree to a very dry room during the night to try to remove moisture from the soil.
- How can I prevent this from happening again? I understand that "don't waterboard your plant for hours" is an obvious answer, but is this the result of overwatering that's been taking place for a long time? Why hasn't my tree shown symptoms like this before when I've watered it in a similar manner?
Thank you!