What is this on my brugs?
Need advice
Get a good magnifying glass and use it to look at the underside of the leaves. Some of the damage looks like it was done by a burrowing pest like a leaf miner. Can you provide more information please. Are these old leaves that came indoors with the plant or were they formed after you took the plants indoors. In a different post you mentioned using hydrogen peroxide to water your plants. Could any of the peroxide have gotten on the leaves? Some of the damage along the edge could have been mechanical. Again, the more information you can provide the easier it will be to help.
it looks like water spotting to me...perhaps from the hydrogen peroxide.. just in the sun... or light.. what's the humidity like inside.. low humdity causes all sorts of leaf problems... and will magnify physical damage ... as the leaves give out to the air a great amount of moisture... kind of overworking them... and brusing causes this to not work in these places.so they are shut down by the plant. high humdity and low soil water is the level I try and maintain...
I spray the leaves with water everyday because they are in my house and the humidity is low. They are getting enough water, I don't think too much. I water them every third day untill the water starts to seep out of the bottom of the pot.
I only gave them H2O2 once a couple weeks ago and that was mixed in with water that I put in the dirt.
I do spray them with neam about once a week - so far no bugs that I have seen.
I give them miricle grow in their water ever other time I water.
I had several paragraph's worth of suggestions. Then clicked on one of the leaf photos to look at the close-up view and pushed the wrong button.... all gone. :-(
If I can remember what I said, I'll re-type it. On the whole, your Brugs look fine. You may have to tweek what you are doing a bit to keep the following in mind. The aim in keeping Brugs happy indoors during winter is to keep the soil mix barely moist while keeping the air humidity high. One other thing to remember: Some pests and diseases, such as fungal diseases, thrive in coo, damp and dark places. Avoid providing those three conditions together.
Watering plants indoors on a set schedule scares me because light conditions can change so much from day to day. One a bright sunny day, your Brugs will process more water than they would on a cloudy or rainy day. One dark days, the roots will stand around in way too much water which has a tendency to block the oxygen uptake.
I would not spray them but a humidifier would help you and your Brugs.
