posted
ok whos heard of mayonaise as a treatment for a plant and what the H@## does it do?
my mom has a orchiad(not my area at all)my cuz grows lots of them down in FL and told her to wipe mayonaise on the leaves and wipe it all off and should solve problem.......makes me scratch me head& go HMMmmmmmmm. her orchid plant has tan spots on leaves,,,claims is not brown but tan and sees no signs of bugs at all.she has no idea what kind it is or as to the flower it gets if& when it gets one...was a gift from someone she did geneology for.she said looks like is planted in petmoss& my step dad waters it daily(by the way he waters everything daily weather it needs it or not)
bbbbbbbbb I will age ungracefully until I become an old woman in a small garden..doing whatever the Hell I want!
posted
njoynit, I have heard of mayo on the leaves for cleaning them off and shinning them up, (like for showing them or display) I personally have not heard of it curing any thing???? I'm not sure of the watering practices, maybe Will Creed can answer (repost this in the Houseplant section) or maybe Papito or the The Plant Doctor will stop by..........
Weezie P.S. I have heard of mayo in the hair for it too, to help it look shiney, maybe try some, it may stop you from scratching your head and going HMMmmmmmmmmmm!!! LOL *BIG SMILE* Weezie
bbbbbbbbb Weezie
Don't forget to be kind to strangers. For some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it. - Bible - Hebrews 13:2
posted
Mayonnaise is generally used to make the leaves of houseplants shiny, but so are egg white, banana peel, olive oil and glycerin.
I will be back for the problem on the tan spot. But i think it is caused by fungus, possibly Phyllostica capitalensis. If your Stepdad overwaters, the resulting moisture highly favors the presence of fungus.
bbbbbbbbb
Amor est vitae essentia. Love is the essence of life.
posted
I agree with Papito, it does sound like a fungal disease, most of which are brought on by excess watering or humidity. Putting wiping mayo on the leaves, will shine it up but do nothing for the actual problem. In truth if any residue is left it may actually make it worse. as it could act as a medium for the disease to grow in.
I am not very familiar with orchids, as they are almost a science in their own right. You may want to do a search on diseases of orchids, and see if you can come up with a pic that looks similar. Then treat it accordingly.
posted
I've heard orchiads are a whole nother realm to grow and have not even decided to venture there.though they would like my climate in summer and can hear hubby complain when would be makeing boxes to hang on trees for them friday they leave on vacation for a week....maybe this is a break the plant has been waiting for.I would think if was fungas problem would be in soil also would a soil change help maybe? least i know how to dress my plants now....dress them in mayo for a sleek evening out...LOL mayo might do good in hair.remember doing face in mayo and my date showed up early boy was i embarressed,could have killed sis though....she knew was mayo mask and said to him i was ready!
bbbbbbbbb I will age ungracefully until I become an old woman in a small garden..doing whatever the Hell I want!