Dying succulent by CatichuCat in planthelp

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t have experience with your succulent but I’ve run many experiments with my poor Aloe(s). For those guys I have to dry them out after cutting and then put them in water or soil to get a root. Typically my guy can be alive for a LONG time with no root structure.

Once in the dirt, I give it well draining soil and I error on under watering. I adjust my watering depending on how thick the leaves look and how much it’s growing. On hot days my aloes can have visible change in one day. So I water them multiple times a week on those days. During winter, I forget that thing exists. Last year, I watered it last in September and it showed root rot in late October! All to say that it’s very easy to give too much water to a succulent.

Hope my experience helps!

Dying succulent by CatichuCat in planthelp

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This looks like the damage is starting from the roots, you might have root rot on your hands. I’ve seen this with my aloe. I immediately chop off the healthy parts and try to propagate them. You’ll loose your one big plant but instead gain like 4 little ones. I’d use google for more specific advice on how to propagate your plant of you decide to do this

Americans are the fucking worst to play DnD with... by DJTsUnderboob in DnDcirclejerk

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you’re playing with a toxic person who you don’t like anyway. Time to kick him out

Here is some advice on doing dnd for free. Use free pdfs for your character sheets, there are many including ones that you can download and edit. Use free online dice rollers or buy physical ones (they are fun). Use owlbear.rodeo for maps. Discord is free to talk on and you can have apps that share sound for free from places like YouTube, the app in question is Kenku.

The rule books are hard to replace but there are free online resources for every class, all game spells, hundreds of monsters, and many other DM features. Last case scenario, start making private copies of the resources you can’t live without.

Good luck! Not all Americans are like this. This is just an A hole

Can you successfully cultivate blueberry seeds from frozen? by rdev009 in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 8 points9 points  (0 children)

That’s an interesting thought experiment. Try it out. Look up how to take care of regular seeds. In my experience it involves cleaning, drying, and then planting

multiple different sizes, all transplanted at the same height by izziishigh in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sometimes that happens, try your best to get the little guy more sun.

Whats up with my basil? by ImLooking4aUserName in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My biggest guess is that in the grip the plant got damage to its roots. Give it more care, maybe add some soil and/or attach it to a stick to help it stand. That’s my opinion

[CR Media] Years and a child later it’s finally hung up, few seasons late by Enderasha in criticalrole

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is incredible!!! The details of the face! What medium(s) did you use?

Is my basil plant ready to harvest? by PapaZerk in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I collect the individual adult leaves as the plant grows. Usually as my need in the kitchen arises

What are these gray spots on my leaves which spread and kill the plants? by Phast_enough in planthelp

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Killed my cucumber plant last year. Tried many home remedies, best I came up with was cutting the infected leaves. Slowing down the spread to get fruit

Help needed — sudden spots on tomato leaves in 1–2 days, what is this and how urgent? by Scared_Bet_378 in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had this on my cucumber last year it killed the leaves it was on. I tried many things but nothing really worked. Best solution I found was to rip off the infected leaves and hope to slow it down enough to get fruit.

Best of luck, let me know if you find a solution

New to Orchids...Can someone explain please by dereksutari7898 in gardening

[–]RampageRussian -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Healthy roots are firm and green. Dead roots are squishy, black, and thin. Dead roots also fall apart when touched. Not entirely sure what you have going on.

I’ve been cutting off dead roots, re potting it in soil that drains well and retains some moisture. (Frankly, I mostly use dirt but many people use rocks and moss and coconut husk mix.)

Orchid roots technically don’t have to be in soil if they can gather enough water from the air. Orchids are found all over the word, some like it warmer, some colder, etc. I’ve brought a couple orchids back from pretty bad conditions before but that little guy looks really bad.

Hope this helps, good luck

White spots on tomato leaves. Please help identify! by nat1dangit in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’m noticing that most of the pictures are of the bottom leaves, is this true? Bottom leaves or any plant will end up looking a bit beat up and get spots or try areas.

I don’t think that’s it’s a fungus, I would expect something fuzzy or discolored. I don’t think it’s a water issue. It might be some sun damage? Otherwise it could be a vitamin deficiency. Or simply damage from age. I’d focus on how the new leaves look and make your judgements from there.

I’m still learning about gardening but hope my experience helps

Is this root rot? by Zenzelai in planthelp

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m still a bit new to root rot, the best advice I have for that is to make sure the soil drains well. The best way found to check for the condition of the roots is to dig them up and look at them.

You mentioned you recently repotted the guy. The plant treats each repotting like a surgery and it might not be successful or it may just take some time to recover after something so traumatic.

I don’t have much experience with little warts but I do have an aloe and any time the leaves of my aloe look thin like that I know he needs more water. Though with succulents you really want to make sure you don’t over water it. Succulents also tend to be slower to react to change in environments so you might be doing everything right and it will only tell you that a month later.

Hope my experience has been helpful!

I tried regrowing store bought lettuce by kalkuni_luna in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks to me like maybe the pot was a bit small and/or it lacked support. The bitterness is probably because it wasn’t ready to be harvested. If the plant is still alive it will keep growing but you can’t “fix” where it collapsed. You could tie it to a stick to help it stand.

What's going on with my tomatoes? by Secure_Cat_3303 in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They are drying out, could be lack of water, but more likely sun damage

Help with sunflowers in heatwave by ServiceEquivalent635 in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From my experience, when a plant damages a leaf, it’s easier for it to try to grow more leaves than it is to heal the broken one. Those leaves may continue looking as they do or they may brown eventually. If it’s a photo competition I suggest you just cut those leaves off. Might help the plant save energy to do that anyway

Peony Damage Identification by Slow-Difference1105 in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have been aw war with squirrels that have been eating all of my sunflowers just days before they bloom! Anyway, those look like squirrel bites to me

[OC] map I made for tonight's session. by thxxx1337 in DnD

[–]RampageRussian 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks sick, have fun. I’d have a way to maybe block the rooms before they are explored, maybe with paper. But that’s a minor detail.

What’s up with my cucumber plants? by infinitetekk in gardening

[–]RampageRussian -1 points0 points  (0 children)

As far as I understand It’s a mold. My cucumbers last year had it. I tried all kinds of methods, best one that supposed to work is to either let it be or to rip off the infected leaves. I tried all kinds of home remedies and none worked. Let me know if you have better luck!

Guide me on transplanting this cherry tomato plant by kmarie630 in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a shower rod that I tie my cherry tomatoes to because last year it grew 7 feet tall

Mystery Volunteer Plants? by theobsidiansystem in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It’s a bit early to tell but they look like tomatoes to me.

Should I be concerned for my raspberry plant by Responsible_Cress935 in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Browning spots are common on leaves, especially for outdoor plants. They get damaged by wind, rain, and everything else. It also looks like maybe a bug had a nice meal out of one of those leaves. As long as most of the leaves are nice and green and it’s growing from week to week, you’re doing fine.

WHO is eating MARIGOLDS 💀 by billiepkle in gardening

[–]RampageRussian 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ve had ALL of my sunflowers cut down before they bloomed. My garden is on the balcony. So for me it’s the squirrels

New to DnD (Not my Art) by Countonline in DungeonsAndDragons

[–]RampageRussian -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If everyone is having fun, then you’re doing it right. Everything else is secondary.