Salvia plant!!

ruthlessblaze

New Member
Hi im new too growing and i bought this salvia plant at underground rroots its came in 3 days and a bunch of leave are drooping down and curl.I made a humidity tent with some plastic wrap and a cardboard box,so is that a ok setup for my plant i mistedbongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmiliebongsmilie:clap:Img_00859.jpgImg_00860.jpgImg_00861.jpgThe box has my plant inside of it :-P
 

puffnopassing

Active Member
id like to grow it haha just make sure it has lots of water and humidity im guessing since didnt they orignally come from rainforests?
 

RainerRocks

Active Member
surprised your not growing poppy too

Some kool info for you..

"What may be the most well known literary use of the poppy occurs both in L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and in MGM's classic 1939 film based on the novel.

In the novel, while on their way to the Emerald City, Dorothy, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Cowardly Lion walk through a field of poppies, and both Dorothy and the Lion mysteriously fall asleep. The Scarecrow and the Tin Man, not being made of flesh and blood, are unaffected. They carry Dorothy to safety and place her on the ground beyond the poppy field. While they are considering how to help the Lion, a field mouse runs in front of them, fleeing a cougar. The Tin Man beheads the cougar with his axe, and the field mouse pledges her eternal gratitude. Being the Queen of the Field Mice, she gathers all her subjects together. The Tin Man cuts down several trees, and builds a wagon. The Lion is pushed onto it, and the mice pull the wagon safely out of the poppy field.

In the 1939 film, the sequence is considerably altered. The poppy field is conjured up by the Wicked Witch of the West, and it appears directly in front of the Emerald City, preventing the four travelers from reaching it. As in the novel, Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion fall asleep, but in a direct reversal of the book, the Scarecrow and the Tin Man are unable to carry Dorothy. Glinda, who has been watching over them, conjures up a snowfall which kills the poppies' narcotic power and enables Dorothy and the Lion to awaken. Unfortunately, the Tin Man has been weeping in despair, and the combination of his tears and the wet snow has caused him to rust. After he is oiled by Dorothy, the four skip happily toward the Emerald City.

In Baum's other Oz books, Oz's ruler, Princess Ozma, is often shown wearing poppies in her hair as decoration."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papaver_somniferum
 

dannyboy602

Well-Known Member
it looks over watered or oxygen starved to me. let it dry out a bit. forget about the misting. you are killing it with kindness.
 
Top