Wet Soil but Wilting Plants? 3 Signs of Dehydration

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The finger test says everything is fine. Push into the top inch of soil and it comes back cool, damp, maybe clinging a bit. Yet the plant above it is drooping by the afternoon, leaf edges going crisp at the margins, and the obvious conclusion – that it needs a drink – leads to more water, which somehow makes it worse.

Wet soil and a thirsty plant are not a contradiction. Watering the garden well means getting moisture into the roots, and there are several ways that hand-off can break down even when the soil around them is holding plenty. Damaged roots can’t pull it in. Compacted or water-repellent compost lets it slide right past. On a brutal afternoon, leaves can lose water faster than any root system could resupply.

3 Signs a Plant Is Thirsty in Damp Soil

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