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I am very new on keeping houseplants and this was the first one I got about a year ago (I know it doesn't look that good now, but it suffered the misfortune of having me learning with it). I moved to a new place by September and I put the plant next to a west window. I water it about twice a week (just a little bit since I almost killed it once for watering it too much). I was happy about a month ago since many new leaves started to show, however recently the small new ones just started to wrinkle and fall down and the old ones got this purplish/brownish color on the top of the leaves and seem to start "wrinkling" as well. Please let me know if you know the name of the plant and specially what do I need to do to take care of it.
Thanks!
You have done really well to have this plant so well grown and not realizing what it is, lol. I would take a cutting and root it, try it in a few locations, grow one in a pop bottle terrarium, one in the bathroom, etc...
Uh, yeah, I guess you're right. I guess I want to increase my chances of success :). For the most part, I tend to grow in higher light than the experts say, so I take cuttings in case the plant rebels...
Hi 3jsmom31, thank you very much for your answer! I have moved it to the bathroom as it was recommended in the link you sent me, given it's more humid there. About cutting it and rooting it, I'm not sure how that's supposed to be done. How much do you need to cut? How many stems per new pot? or I just put them in the same pot with my fittonia? Please let me know if you know a useful link I could check or if you have any suggestions.
Well, I was at the store yesterday and saw a pink veined fittonia (for 67 cents). It was dropped on it's head so had bent/broken stems just above the first leaf joint. I saw new growth coming from the joint on 2 of the plants in the pot. It contained 3 rooted plants, and was probably full before it made it to the discount table. I did some whacking on the 2 and air layered the 3rd. I will let you know how it turns out. If they root as easily as it looks like they will, you could end up with a lot of them. If some of your plant breaks off, I wouldn't hesitate to carefully remove the lower leaves, leaving 2 to 3 leaves at the tip, put it in a gallon ziplock with some moistened soil, blow it up, yep by mouth, zip it up and put it someplace sort of warm but out of direct sunlight. I sometimes use other mini terrariums, too, from clear sandwich boxes to 2 liters bottles placed over a 3 inch pot, lol.
Hi 3jsmom31 and daisylovn, sorry I didn't reply before. Thank you very much for your useful information, I'll try and follow the instructions you suggested.
3jsmom if your pink one takes off want to trade? I have the white brocade and a ton of other stuff...not normally known for being houseplants but I have them ashouseplants
It is iffy. I think the plant was outside during frost, so there is damage, but still a couple parts not collapsed :). And you know I want to trade, lol.
Yep,Yep,Yep, those 2 liter soda bottles are just the greatest and the part that you cut off from the bottom make wonderful humidity trays. Just enough to keep the pot out of the water but just right for maintaining humidity for plants that need it. They also give a quick view of how much water your pot is draining. Love them little things, save everyone my wife uses( she's a seltzer freak).
Hi, I know my post is kinda outdated, but I just discovered some days ago that there are little bugs living in the soil of the fittonia, my boyfriend told me they look like mites. Does anybody know how to get rid of these?
I have just started using neem oil to spray my plants/soil surface. Maybe you can find out for sure if you give more description. I don't know why thrip comes to mind, but maybe.you can check online to see if that is the pest.
Might be fungus gnats. They can be troublesome on indoor plants. Sprinkle some cinnamon on the soil if there are not very many. If you have several, put a thin layer of sand over the soil. Let the top of the sand dry between waterings.