Salvia will adapt to many environments, but the adjustment takes time. Every time you do something – anything – to your plant, its growth will slow for a week or two while it re-adjusts to the change. This is why I leave my plants alone!
Once my cuttings root, I transplant them into a pot large enough to accommodate a mature plant, I put them on my windowsill where I know they’ll get good light, and then I leave them alone. Less is more!
The plant that lost all of its leaves may survive. Notice the small leaves at each node. These will form new branches if conditions are good. (I deliberately remove all of the large primary leaves prior to rooting a cutting.)
Browning on leaf edges is nothing to worry about, but it looks like the base of the stem of the plant in the smaller pot might be rotting? Keep the soil moist but not saturated. The small pot is too small. You’ll eventually have to transplant, but wait until the plant has adjusted and you get some new, healthy growth.
No misting! No humidity tents! I don’t know where this idea started, but humidity tents and misting encourage rot, mold, etc.
Good luck.
(Here’s a shot of some of my current plants. The largest was an unrooted cutting in mid-July, and will be harvested in mid-November.)
gibran2 attached the following image(s):
plants.jpg
(89kb) downloaded 96 time(s).gibran2 is a fictional character. Any resemblance to anyone living or dead is purely coincidental.