The reason for my thread - I fear this tree is not getting exactly what it needs.




Thanks!






Ever bit of advice we've gotten is to not over-water.. so I think I might be actually under-watering! I water ~1x/week. It definitely dries out, but it has been getting hot here (almost 100F today) so I suspect I may need to water slightly more (?).AnnaIkona wrote: How often are you watering the tree? The soil must not be moist 24/7. Let the soil dry out and then after a day or two water it.
I'd have to dig around to know if they've disappeared since I cultivated them into the soil. I'm curious to check now... maybe tomorrow.AnnaIkona wrote:Have the pellets from the citrus fertilizer dissolved/disappeared yet? If yes, wait a week or two and then add the mild fertelizer you have.
The saucer is attached to this potimafan26 wrote:Lose the saucer or turn it upside down. If your temps are 100 degrees, I would think it could use more watering in a pot but it does depend on the kind of media you are using.
My media drains very well so I have to water my citrus trees every day. If I miss 4 days the leaves start to curl. One of my trees has been in the pot for about 18 years.
What kind of soil are you using.?
Does it have compost? If it does, give the tree miracle grow for acid loving plants every two weeks and see if there is an improvement. If you want to foliar feed, do it early in the morning when the stomata are still open and douse the bottom of the leaves not just the top.
Citrus trees like acidic soil. If you have compost in the pot it may be more alkaline. Alkaline soil makes micronutrients less available.
The top leaves are more yellow than the bottom ones. That can be a nutrient or waterring issue. Citrus are very sensitive to micronutrient deficiencies.
https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ch142