Hi,
I'm very new to gardening, having purchased my first home a few months ago I immediately got the bug and have started planting what seems to me a big array of edible plants.
I bought some hazlenut plants from Focus (to take advantage of them going into administration) and they looked fairly healthy when bought. I planted them with a good mix of compost and soil (which is extremely sandy) to help retain water a bit better than the natural sand on its own.
They've been in the ground around 5-6 weeks now and at about 2 weeks the a few of the leaves started turning brown, and with brown speckles (but not many) on them. I googled it (being my only resource at that time) and came to the conclusion it was leaf scorch, I've since put some slow-release all-purpose plant food in and around the soil of the hazlenuts to help. Although it's helped a bit there still is quite a bit of it. Am i on the right track and should I allow the plant a few more months to see how it progresses? I picked hazlenuts as I heard they were quite hardy.
Thanks
I'm very new to gardening, having purchased my first home a few months ago I immediately got the bug and have started planting what seems to me a big array of edible plants.
I bought some hazlenut plants from Focus (to take advantage of them going into administration) and they looked fairly healthy when bought. I planted them with a good mix of compost and soil (which is extremely sandy) to help retain water a bit better than the natural sand on its own.
They've been in the ground around 5-6 weeks now and at about 2 weeks the a few of the leaves started turning brown, and with brown speckles (but not many) on them. I googled it (being my only resource at that time) and came to the conclusion it was leaf scorch, I've since put some slow-release all-purpose plant food in and around the soil of the hazlenuts to help. Although it's helped a bit there still is quite a bit of it. Am i on the right track and should I allow the plant a few more months to see how it progresses? I picked hazlenuts as I heard they were quite hardy.
Thanks
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