Comment on Help! Monstera leaves turn brown
givesomefucks@lemmy.world 1 day agoIt might be something else.
But as far as repotting as soon as you get it, it depends. It might be fine for a year or two, or it might be completely rootbound in old soil that has no nutrients and just a bunch of nitrogen dumped on top as a bandaid.
I grew up on a farm, not an expert on houseplants. But most of the time if everything else seems fine but leaves are browning, it’s because there’s too much nitrogen. Especially for houseplants a lot of fertilizer is “slow release”, so if that’s the problem, repotting is the only fix. All that nitrogen in the soil will just stay there and keep getting picked up by the plant.
As far as I know, repotting “early” can’t really backfire either.
mourningcrows@feddit.org 1 day ago
My experiences haven’t been too well with repotting, so I often try to avoid it as long as I can… but I just checked and that pot might actually be a little small for this plant. A few roots are sticking out of the drainage holes a bit
givesomefucks@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Yeah, that’s not just “rootbound” that’s a serious case.
A bigger pot and new soil will def help, just watch some YouTube videos first if you’re nervous.
But if it’s growing out of drainage holes, there’s too much roots and not enough soil in the pot.
mourningcrows@feddit.org 1 day ago
I repotted it now and aside from tight roots I also found them and the soil to be really moist! If I’m lucky this helped - and I’ll pay more attention to let it dry more before watering again!
givesomefucks@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Yeah, the roots were about to start rotting then.
It should be fine now for a couple years.
Like I said tho, pretty sure that plant species is super picky. If it still dies you might want to try like a rubber plant or something. They’re pretty easy to keep alive, which make them a lot more forgiving.
It’s like learning how to drive a manual transmission on an old Civic instead of a Ferrari.
You can make a lot more mistakes and learn from them with ruining it.
Start with what’s easy, and then move on to more difficult options that you’d enjoy more.
But damage from under watering is always more gradual and less serious than over watering for any plant. I just water mine when the soil is visibly dry or leaves are droopy, and I’ve even managed to keep a fiddle leaf alive and growing for a couple years now. If I had started with that, I’d have killed a dozen learning the basics.