I have a strong, healthy, tall, very old plant sitting in a pot at
the top of the stairs to my attic studio. She has plenty of light, food
and care and seems happy. But lately she has begun to do something very
odd: she tosses soil around.
I am not joking. Only yesterday I
vacuumed around the pot where handfuls of soil had yet again popped up
and sprayed the surroundings. The pot is not overly full and the compost
is well patted down around the plant's trunk.
Today she has
somehow, all by herself, spat out dirt again. What's more, there's a
sink hole in the compost. like a hollow space under the topsoil, even
though the pot is full. There are no dogs, cats, birds, mice or insects in the house.
P.S.
Since writing the above, I've figured out that what's most likely happening is that the plant's roots have grown too big for the pot, they are squeezed and thus pushing the soil up. That's why it's spilling over the rim of the pot. I've got to re-pot the plant but it's such a heavy chore, I'll have to find someone to help.
2 comments:
At the Ontario Science Centre in Toronto there was (is?) a display showing a fully grown tree and its root system. The rule, it seems, says the roots will be the same as the part above the soil.
That is definitely a beautiful plant.
Deanna, thanks. The plant is going to be re-potted very soon.
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