I joined this group because I wasn’t finding any information on what I needed and I’m hoping someone on here can give me a lil info. I have a plant that I’ve been growing for at least two months. Two weeks ago, it was 100° and when I got home from work I noticed some of the fan leaves were brown and a lil crisp. Figured I’d keep it out of the sun for a day or two and let it come back. Well, last week, I decided to move it into a bigger pot, and I left it out on my balcony for literally 5 mins after that... Went back out to get it, and my got damn dog ate pretty much ALL of the fan leaves off my plant. Now this isn’t the first plant she’s done this to, but the other plant that she did this to once before was barely a few weeks old, so it never came back from that. My dog has an attraction to marijuana leaves. Now, my question is, is this thing salvageable? It’s been a good week since she ate the leaves, she did leave a couple of the smaller leaves on. I’ve been watering it, and leaving it in the sunlight as usual. I’m just not seeing much process. I will attach a photo of the plant right after she ate the leaves, and what it looks like right now. The darker one was about a week ago and the photo with the sunlight is today. Is there any hope left for this plant or should I just put it out of its misery? Appreciate any input and advice! Thanks
Thank you for responding. Relieved to hear that it will continue to grow. I’m not too familiar with clones, but I will def look into it.
Here's a thread I wrote on a DIY cloner, can purchase one for not too much too. A cheap and effecient cloner
Lol! For real! This is the second plant I’ve tried growing and she’s eaten. I don’t know what it is, but she has an obsession with pot leaves!
Oh hey, and stoned me, I forgot to welcome you to GrassCity, so ta da, welcome @Kushhqueeen I'd roll out the red carpet, but I think I will just roll a joint instead
As the members above have told ya ..itll bounce back. Plants are resilient like that. As long as they have something on them to achieve photosynthesis, they'll usually bounce back.