Dragon plants are among the rare plants that are perfectly happy indoors. However, they do get their fair share of problems.
From leaves changing colors to stems bending over, find what ails your dracaena marginata and fix the issue!
Make note of the symptoms on your dracaena marginata, and read on.
This is either due to lack of light or excess water.
Note: In case you’ve forgotten to water your plant for more than 2 weeks, the dragon plant’s first reaction is to shed its lowest leaves.
Also, having lower leaves wither and die is normal for this plant, as long as leaves higher up are healthy. As a side note, some varieties are better than others at keeping their lower leaves.
However, they all benefit from having more moisture in the air around them.
This is what happens when the dracaena is too cold.
If new leaves still appear at the top, losing a few bottom leaves is part of your dracaena’s natural cycle. Most plants drop older inefficient leaves. Before the leaf detaches and falls, it turns yellow: nutrients are being recycled back into the plant for new growth.
If many or all leaves turn yellow and droop over, again, check whether you’re overwatering or not. In extreme cases, the stem softens and bends over.
This is symptomatic of an onslaught of scale insects.
You’ll reduce probability of this happening if you clean the plant’s leaves often (monthly).
Leaves are pale but still feel firm. Lack of light usually is the cause of this.
Too much sun or dry air can lead to leaves showing signs of water stress.
If necessary, place the pot of the dracaena on a tray filled with clay pebbles or gravel. Douse the gravel or clay with water. Evaporation creates extra moisture around the plant. Ensure the pot itself doesn’t sit in water, but rests above it. Tips on using clay balls as air humidifiers.
If you water your dragon plant with tap water, too much fluoride may disturb the plant’s normal functions.
If it’s a sharp bend, it’s most certainly because of overwatering:
If it’s a long bend, it means the dragon tree is falling over under its own weight.
For these “long bend” cases, stake the plant to solve the problem. Some say to give the plant a “shake” every now and then, which surely helps, but only if it’s done for at least 15 minutes a day in total.
This is perfectly normal, and the sign of a healthy plant. What’s happening here is guttation. It’s a way for the plant to eliminate excess water.
→ Read also: care for dracaena marginata the right way
What is happening when a dracaena marginata’s new leaves stick together and don’t separate, eventually forming a hard spike? Please help!
Hello Andrea, that really sounds like a very rare event, it’s the first time I’ve heard of it. Things I can imagine might explain:
– a colony of insects (like thrips or scale) or mites has infected the stem and is keeping the leaves together to form a protective shell. It this is the case, you should be able to peel a leaf back to see if webbing or tiny insects appear.
– for some reason growth is interrupted in that stem and development is “paused” before leaves unfurl. This might be caused by watering issues or something like a temperature shock if the plant was moved recently. Are all stems affected?
– a random mutation in the gene sequence of leaf bud stems “broke” the natural unfurling process and it’s now growing only with whatever energy it gets from the outer leaves of the spike.
It would be interesting to see a few pictures, if possible.