Can't figure out what this is and it's killing my plants.

bbyb420

Well-Known Member
Fuck. Guys please stop with this nonsense I never intended for this thread to turn into the shit storm it has turned into. Chuck thank you for providing that info on broad mites. I'm so pissed at my shitty dispensary, this is all their fault for giving me shitty clones in the first place. I looked on the underside of the leaves and found nothing but I took a very close look and saw 2 little bugs that looked EXACTLY like the broad mites in those pics.

Can you please tell me what I have to do to eradicate these bugs from my grow room and make sure they never come back? It seems to only have affected the flowering room..I have 2 plants in the veg room that don't have any (from what I can see) but they are very tiny. Will SM-90 work?
 

Guy2HIGH

Active Member
[QUOTE="bbyb420, post: 11735190, member: 899001"
Can you please tell me what I have to do to eradicate these bugs from my grow room and make sure they never come back? It seems to only have affected the flowering room..I have 2 plants in the veg room that don't have any (from what I can see) but they are very tiny. Will SM-90 work?[/QUOTE]

First, to even see them, you need at least a 20X scope... they are incredibly tiny and not visible to the naked eye. The chances of you eradicating them is very small. They can destroy plants fast and are one of the worst cannabis pests known to man. If you have them on a few plants in your grow area, then they are probably on every plant in your grow area by now.

https://www.opengrow.com/topic/48004-how-do-you-eradicate-broad-mites-surely-but-safely/

I wish you good luck with this problematic pest.
 

chuck estevez

Well-Known Member
Fuck. Guys please stop with this nonsense I never intended for this thread to turn into the shit storm it has turned into. Chuck thank you for providing that info on broad mites. I'm so pissed at my shitty dispensary, this is all their fault for giving me shitty clones in the first place. I looked on the underside of the leaves and found nothing but I took a very close look and saw 2 little bugs that looked EXACTLY like the broad mites in those pics.

Can you please tell me what I have to do to eradicate these bugs from my grow room and make sure they never come back? It seems to only have affected the flowering room..I have 2 plants in the veg room that don't have any (from what I can see) but they are very tiny. Will SM-90 work?
I have had broadmites, I really don't think you have them. I have diagnosed MANY of the same issues as you are having and I Usually nail it when it comes to using distilled water, you develop exactly the issues you are having. Take it for what it is worth. the battle with this little bug is not fun,hope you don't have them.
look at this chart, when 1 thing is wrong, it throws eveyrthing off

 

bbyb420

Well-Known Member
I have had broadmites, I really don't think you have them. I have diagnosed MANY of the same issues as you are having and I Usually nail it when it comes to using distilled water, you develop exactly the issues you are having. Take it for what it is worth. the battle with this little bug is not fun,hope you don't have them.
look at this chart, when 1 thing is wrong, it throws eveyrthing off
You don't think so eh? Well, about the distilled water, I've been using it since I started growing and this is the first time something like this has happened. But I totally see where you're coming from, I buy the 2.5 gallon jugs at the store. They also sell spring water ones, should I start using those instead? Will it provide me with the proper micro nutrients? If not what can I get to ensure that these are getting to my plants? I can't use my tap water because my cities tap is disgusting.
 

chuck estevez

Well-Known Member
You don't think so eh? Well, about the distilled water, I've been using it since I started growing and this is the first time something like this has happened. But I totally see where you're coming from, I buy the 2.5 gallon jugs at the store. They also sell spring water ones, should I start using those instead? Will it provide me with the proper micro nutrients? If not what can I get to ensure that these are getting to my plants? I can't use my tap water because my cities tap is disgusting.
I use a r/o unit from purewaterclub.com,5 stage for $95
This is my theory, nutrients work on ions, distilled has nothing,so it strips those ions causing a def. I have seen it more times than not, why I asked about your water in my first post, so, anything other than distilled, with r/o, you still need to supplement cal/mag
 

Alexander Supertramp

Well-Known Member
apparently not,
How do leaves change color?

As the Earth makes its 365-day journey around the sun, some parts of the planet will get fewer hours of sunlight at certain times of the year. In those regions, the days become shorter and the nights get longer. The temperature slowly drops. Autumn comes, and then winter.

Trees respond to the decreasing amount of sunlight by producing less and less chlorophyll. Eventually, a tree stops producing chlorophyll. When that happens, the carotenoid already in the leaves can finally show through. The leaves become a bright rainbow of glowing yellows,



Do leaves change because of weather?

Perhaps you've noticed that in some years, the red fall colors seem brighter and more spectacular than in other years. The temperature and cloud covercan make a big difference in a tree's red colors from year to year.

When a number of warm, sunny autumn days and cool but not freezing nights come one after the other, it's going to be a good year for reds. In the daytime, the leaves can produce lots of sugar, but the cool night temperatures prevent the sugar sap from flowing through the leaf veins and down into the branches and trunk. Anthocyanins to the rescue! Researchers have found out that anthocyanins are produced as a form of protection. They allow the plant to recover nutrients in the leaves before they fall off. This helps make sure that the tree will be ready for the next growing season. Anthocyanins give leaves their bright, brilliant shades of red, purple and crimson.

The yellow, gold and orange colors created by carotenoid remain fairly constant from year to year. That's because carotenoids are always present in leaves and the amount does not change in response to weather.
The amount of rain in a year also affects autumn leaf color. A severe drought can delay the arrival of fall colors by a few weeks. A warm, wet period during fall will lower the intensity, or brightness, of autumn colors. A severe frost will kill the leaves, turning them brown and causing them to drop early. The best autumn colors come when there's been:



  • a warm, wet spring
  • a summer that's not too hot or dry, and
  • a fall with plenty of warm sunny days and cool nights.
And by that time of year the mast crop has been set and finished.
 
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