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21

Wednesday, November 18th 2009, 11:33am

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

Hello

below are the pictures:




and comparing even the green plant, which looks really completely different:


Therefore the decisive hand is none that just runs, but it is always the case.
It thinks something is missing of the plant, and if so what could it be?

As said both plants grow on fairly equal terms, and so is the yellowish plant since she germinated.

With kind regards
Stefan

22

Wednesday, November 18th 2009, 4:57pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

Moin

That looks me Yes to iron out. May be a leaf fertilization will help. Or you have a variegate form there.

Greeting Lukas

23

Wednesday, November 18th 2009, 6:49pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

Hello

frankly I can not imagine, that your iron is missing.
I fertilizers regularly, sometimes with normal room plant fertilizer and sometimes also with blue corn.
The other normal green plant is fertilised as well.
This page fault with new leaves not made even after repeated transplanting.

I can not imagine but also that it should be a variagte form, because Panaschierungen look but something different.

With kind regards
Stefan

Philipp

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Posts: 238

Location: Oberbayern

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24

Wednesday, November 18th 2009, 9:31pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

Hi Stefan,

Iron deficiency is also really different from and is almost never found in the Knollis, this one would have to put on already extremely clumsy.
I would have typed rather at first glance on strong nitrogen deficiency, what but probably also comes out of the question when I read through the conditions I. With charcoal, is the nitrogen while already times like flutes, but if for example in the pot with the yellow plant accidentally too much coal would have been, would have the hand must be still somewhat green, because regularly fertilized and umgetopft to was.

I think you have really a variegate form! The plants with variegated leaves seen in nurseries and garden centres, correspond to a specific schema only because is as intended by the breeder and the dealers! Such dyes must be always clear and regularly in a certain way in order to meet the aesthetic feeling of most people, otherwise something can be not to sell.
But fortunately the nature not to such rules cares Yes, Panaschierungen can occur in many plants in all possible forms and shades, pure white and well-defined patterns are more an exception!
Pass on to the plant, I've never heard of a variegated Anchomanes, would be very interested as it is still developing.

Just a comment to the blue corn: safe for potted plants is a very effective fertilizer, but I consider it absurd that we recommend you the manufacturer all seriousness for use in the garden! Throw this stuff never in the vegetable when her what want harvest better than in the next discount store around!

VG Philipp

Dixon

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25

Wednesday, November 18th 2009, 10:02pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

Hi Stefan
This looks really weird. Somehow after a chlorosis.
A few thoughts to:
You write abundant charcoal in the substrate; Charcoal has among others plenty
"absorbtive properties", is to say fertilizer components wander in the coal and not in the plant.
Also allows the distribution of chlorophyll on your image on a lack of other close: magnesium.
Have you ever checked the pH of your current substrate? -Too high values interfere with the absorption of iron. Values from pH 7.5 should be reduced by using soft pouring water and lack of potash-based fertilizer...

-No silver bullet this all should be just a few thoughts - as I said,

-grüner greeting-
Frank

Philipp

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26

Wednesday, November 18th 2009, 10:17pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

On potash-rich fertilizer lead in our bulbous plants to do so that the plant shrinks further, they need much potassium in any case. If the pH would be really too high only a change of substrate would help, but I don't think so here so that it is.

27

Thursday, November 19th 2009, 4:07pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

Hello

I have not noticed so with charcoal.
With the green plant on the same substrate is, has therefore also as much charcoal in the ground striking only.

I have not checked yet the pH-value.
Must I do times.
I use only a soft irrigation water to the irrigation water: Because we have here also only a soft tap water.
Nocvh to the pH-value: on the surface of the substrate as a kind of MOSS, or something like that grow like a seaweed. That would have to grow only on acid substrate, or?

I will nevertheless times make a pH test.
Should he be too high I'll repot.

The blue seed: I dung mainly Amorphophallus intended for which I don't eat it.
Especially I dung that are so large that a fertilization would be too expensive with good fertilizer.

With kind regards
Stefan

28

Thursday, November 19th 2009, 4:14pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

Hello

so p-H-value of tap water: ca 6,5
pH value of the substrate: between 6.2 and 6.8

This should be not too high, or?

With kind regards
Stefan

Philipp

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29

Thursday, November 19th 2009, 6:39pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

I would also like wow, so soft tap water!:D
For me, it is highly enriched with lime, annoying sometimes already bit...

The pH of the substrate is fine I would say.

«Originally posted by» "Stefan_09_08_1991".»

The blue seed: I dung mainly Amorphophallus intended for which I don't eat it.
Especially I dung that are so large that a fertilization would be too expensive with good fertilizer.

With kind regards
Stefan

Was also not as criticism. As I said, you can fertilize Yes already quite effectively heavily draining potted plants so.
Was intended only as general reference because this fertilizer is very popular and that is actually suitable for blue grain is used by many people for anything.

VG Philipp

30

Friday, November 20th 2009, 3:55pm

Re: Anchomanes difformis Knolle

Hello

with the blue grain was used not as a criticism.
You are right. Vegetables or something not dung I thus also.
Here you must not fertilize actually anyway, because of the natural ground here is so good enough.
If my father wants to fertilize then dochmal, then he makes it with compost.

Yes, I know from the Hörensage if the wasserkoche with a thick kalkschicht in it. I here have never had the problem. Comes in real handy.

Times, I hope that the Anchomanes beautiful growing further.

With kind regards
Stefan

Mr. Titanum

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31

Friday, February 7th 2020, 5:51pm

Neuaustriebe 2020

Anchomanes fans,

after one of my tubers bloomed last year ( flowers 2019 ), the tubers are now starting to drift again. index.php?page=Attachment&attachmentID=5600 index.php?page=Attachment&attachmentID=5602 index.php?page=Attachment&attachmentID=5601
Whether this is earlier than last year, I cannot say; the pictures in the contribution to the flowering last year are from May 8 and since the leaves scnhon were almost a meter in size.
Let's wait and see when they reach the size this year...

Happy growing, Bernhard.

musa

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Location: Wien

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32

Tuesday, February 11th 2020, 10:49am

That's what I call an ingenious rootwork, Bernhard!
Michael

33

Wednesday, February 12th 2020, 12:26am

Servus together!

Bernard - the one in the picture that bloomed last year? I'm looking forward to mine. They're also drifting, but I haven't thought about flowers yet. So if not this, then I hope for next year:D

Lg

Mr. Titanum

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34

Wednesday, February 12th 2020, 9:58am

Hello Sonja,

no, the pot pictured is that with the three tubers, all of which made only leaves last spring; the flowering, was the thick one that was individually in the pot.
This can be seen here in the first picture in 2019.

Let's wait and see what the 4 tubers do this year....

Happy growing, Bernhard.

35

Wednesday, February 12th 2020, 10:50am

Hopefully the three tubers got a slightly bigger pot. In view of the enormous root masses, it is already too late to be isolated.

Mr. Titanum

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36

Wednesday, February 12th 2020, 12:39pm

Hello mitskäfer,

yes, they are now in a much larger pot.....
But it could probably be isolated now; there would, of course, be torn down and severed roots; I would leave such a plant unstuffed for one or two weeks, so that the injuries can dry thoroughly and then pot and expect the plants to survive this and then continue to grow...

Happy growing, Bernhard.

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