I Want to Live! -- What that Sick Plant is Really Saying


© Carol Wallace

For the past three years I have been threatening to shovel-prune my trumpet vine, which, in the six years since we planted it, has never put out a single flower. Then one day I made the threat in its hearing.The next week it put out nine huge, glorious trumpets.

I have heard tales of plants which flowered after a series of threats by their owners; I never believed them. I assumed (and still do) that the real story here is that the gardener's patience wore thin a wee bit short of the plant's natural cycle. Nevertheless, I spent the next week threatening my non-flowering wisteria. Blossom or die!

What that trumpet vine did was remind me of the basic fact that gardeners all too often forget. Plants want to live. They do everything in their own power to survive - including blooming, if it will keep them from being composted. If they sit in the ground sulking and wilting it's not out of spite. The fact that they linger at all, thrusting out pale, fragile shoots, is a sign that they are trying their best, under difficult circumstances, to survive.

If a plant wilts and wanes, or sits and stagnate, it is more likely the fault of the gardener than that of the plant. The gardener is not listening to what the plant is saying. And plants do talk, in a very nonverbal way. For instance, when they shrivel or wilt, this usually means, in plant-talk, 'I'm thirsty.' Yellow leaves are often a code for 'I'm hungry.' Or 'I'm drowning.' Spots and holes mean there is a problem with insects or disease. If we pay attention to our plants, and take care of them them the way we would a pet, or a family member, they would respond gratefully, and begin to thrive again. Ignore them, and the malady can be fatal. Worse still, it could be contagious.

Say your rose bush breaks out in a rash. Little black spots all over the leaves. What do spots mean when they appear on you? You're sick! Same with that rosebush - it has blackspot, which, if you happen to be a nearby rosebush, means you're in danger of getting the same ugly rash. Treat it - or lose it! Rosarian Mark Whitelaw points out that strange spots, holes or colors in plant leaves are symptoms of plant problems, just as they are of people problems. They communicate something. So figure out what it's saying and then take appropriate action. The Texas Handbook of Plant Diseases may be of some help.

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

20.   Feb 15, 1999 12:39 PM
There's a Himrod in the Sunset Western Garden Book. Is that it, jojo? Thanks for the recommendation, by the way. The ones I have are Glenora and something else, but they were end-of-season rejects fro ...

-- posted by spinlily


19.   Feb 14, 1999 11:47 PM
Bordeaux is a mixture of lime and sulpher which has been used on grapes to control mildew for over a century. It shouldn't harm Puget Sound. ...

-- posted by Kirk_Johnson


18.   Feb 14, 1999 10:18 PM
Hey Suzanne

I highly recommend "Nimrod". It's mildew-resistant and highly productive in our mild-summers, and does very well in my garden, even though there's more shade than sun.

The grapes ar ...


-- posted by Jojo


17.   Feb 14, 1999 9:48 PM
Then with a bit of work you ought to be able to grow all kinds of things! So many plants seem to demand excellent drainage, which is a major amount of work for those of us with clay.

You ought to ...


-- posted by CarolWallace


16.   Feb 14, 1999 7:06 PM
Although most people in our area have heavy clay soil (and that is what I'm used to gardening in), we managed to buy a house next a former sand and gravel pit... I wondered why not much was growing he ...

-- posted by spinlily





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