Arrows in general are looking pretty good, you can exaggerate them a bit more and make them grow bigger more exponentially, but they're pretty solid. Another thing to keep in mind is that the lineweight you did is a bit wobbly. Don't forget to always focus on confidence over accuracy. If it doesn't exactly match the previous line don't stress about it, keep going. As a last thing try to keep the arrows within the page, plan them a bit more if necessary.

Leaves are looking pretty good too, though there are some like the top left leaf, which is a bit too exaggerated. Try not to push the leaves gesture that much.

On branches you're doing a great job, confident lines and ellipses, and pretty nice accuracy. The issue you're having is the visible tails you have. To get this better of course practice will be important, but you can also overlap your strokes more with the previous ones, just like on the superimposed lines exercise.

On the plants you're doing mainly a good job too, but I want to point out some issues I've found so you can keep improving:

-First is that you aren't drawing 2 times through every ellipse. Don't forget that you should draw 2 times through every ellipse you draw freehand on drawabox.

-Second thing I wanted to talk about is size. You're clearly struggling on this last drawing to get those small branches correct. When something like this is going to happen don't be afraid to use the whole page for just one plant. In drawabox the most important thing is that you always give your best on every drawing. If that means that you need to do only one plant per page then do one more plant per page.

-Third thing is working additively. On this plant on the top left you got some leaves where you cut into them. This is one of the cases when working additively would have been pretty much the same. So if you encounter again yourself on this situation, do it additively.

-Fourth thing is scratchy lines. This is pretty much what I've explained on the arrows part, where you added lineweight focusing on accuracy instead of in confidence, but I wanted to mention it here again as it's pretty important. When you add lineweight to some line, make sure you do it only once, if you fail, it doesn't matter, move on to the next line. But repeating that line you missed will only make the drawing messier.

-The next thing is breaking everything on its simple forms always you can. On the plant on the middle of this page. You've approached complex curves on the leaves on a single go. When you encounter a complex curve, start first with a simple one, and then add complexity with more simple curves as shown here..

-And lastly, I can see that on some places you've approached texture by outlining forms. As explained on lesson 2, all the texture you approach in drawabox should be only by drawing cast shadows. This means that you should never outline a form on texture, unless this form is breaking the silhouette, then it's valid.

As I've explained a lot of things and it's a lot to digest, I want you to do one more plant drawing, taking the complete page and trying to keep in mind all I said. Good luck and keep up the good work!