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5 answers

Bring it indoors, keep it above 55 or so with ample sunlight. It might come back if it wasn't hurt too badly. cut off everything that dies, and wait a few weeks to see what happens.

I did this to my aloe vera, lost a lot of leaves, but it eventually came back healthy as ever.

good luck!

2007-02-01 15:01:24 · answer #1 · answered by Thuja M 3 · 0 0

First of all, bring it indoors if it is not already, or move it away from a cold window or room. Secondly, wait a week or so and if it hasn't perked up and looks like it's wilting all over, you may have to prune off all of the frost bitten parts. Try squeezing the trunk. If it's all mushy then you probably will lose the plant. Sorry sweety.

2007-01-31 11:12:17 · answer #2 · answered by Lavendersblue 2 · 0 0

steadily warming the affected epidermis is fundamental to treating frostbite. to achieve this: guard your epidermis from extra desirable exposure. once you're exterior, heat frostbitten palms by way of tucking them into your armpits. guard your face, nostril or ears by way of masking the section with dry, gloved palms. do not rub the affected section and by no skill rub snow on frostbitten epidermis. Get out of the chilly. as quickly as you're indoors, get rid of moist outfits. steadily heat frostbitten factors. positioned frostbitten palms or ft in heat water — 104 to 107.6 F (40 to 40 two C). Wrap or conceal different factors in a heat blanket. do not use direct warmth, which contain a range, warmth lamp, fire or heating pad, using fact those could reason burns before you experience them on your numb epidermis. do not walk on frostbitten ft or ft if achieveable. This extra desirable damages the tissue. If there is any risk the affected factors will freeze back, do not thaw them. in the event that they're already thawed, wrap them up so as that they don't exchange into frozen back. Get emergency scientific help. If numbness or sustained soreness remains for the period of warming or if blisters improve, seek for scientific interest.

2016-12-13 05:38:16 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If all the leaves are black dump it and start over

A 55 year NORTHERN Gardener

2007-01-31 11:53:16 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

After a freeze mine looked quite dead and was mostly mushy. I left it alone, and it came back.

2007-01-31 13:03:16 · answer #5 · answered by Ed 6 · 0 0

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