N def or necrosis plez help

giglewigle

Well-Known Member
i forgot 2 add i also used a product called yates liquid compost all relativally low npk values on all the stuff iv used nothing over 5 im pretty sure as far as im aware there should be enought nutes in the soil witch is canna terra btw i can go take some pics but ittl have 2 be under the leds no other light source
 

Johnei

Well-Known Member
Going back to my very first response to you here in this thread, this can all be caused by overwatering, fooling the observer into thinking all kinds of other things. Cold temps will only compound overwatering situation into a bad place, like what we see here. Just a thought if you are not considering that it is overwatering or a not well draining soil mix to begin with is the cause, maybe.
 

Johnei

Well-Known Member
Feeding teas usually increases water holding for a time and water retention times is prolonged. You may be getting your watering schedule off.
 

giglewigle

Well-Known Member
I find the air conditioner isn't too expensive to run when you put it into auto mode with a set temperature, It automatically runs, heat, cool or dry depending on the sensors. So you don't get that instant swamp effect as things heat up.
im growing in a tent in a caravan out back i gotta do it uo and insulat it better so theres no aircon plus im trippen allready over the power bill our last one was like 1200 for the 3 month period i may be giving it to mutch water when i water but i dont water untill the pot gets as light as possable so like 3 to 5 days
 

Johnei

Well-Known Member
And going back to a previous post of mine I wrote already. If you have been feeding this and that, plus teas, plus the soil is rich, as you have stated you have been, I told you, clean water for a while man, and only when they need it not before in a guessing game and starving roots of oxygen.
That's all I got for you. Good luck.
 

giglewigle

Well-Known Member
And going back to a previous post of mine I wrote already. If you have been feeding this and that, plus teas, plus the soil is rich, as you have stated you have been, I told you, clean water for a while man, and only when they need it not before in a guessing game and starving roots of oxygen.
That's all I got for you. Good luck.
yea since u said that iv only been giving it water dude
 

ANC

Well-Known Member
im growing in a tent in a caravan out back i gotta do it uo and insulat it better so theres no aircon plus im trippen allready over the power bill our last one was like 1200 for the 3 month period i may be giving it to mutch water when i water but i dont water untill the pot gets as light as possable so like 3 to 5 days
Don't let the pots get THAT dry, just light, is good enough, drying out = pH swings, the last thing you need now.
 

Johnei

Well-Known Member
Overwatering and too much food too often is my guess here of the possible cause.
and cold temps doesn't help either of these situations if that is a variable as well.
 

Johnei

Well-Known Member
yea since u said that iv only been giving it water dude
then you are still overwatering, watering them too soon when they don't need it, regardless what you say letting them dry to light pot, you may be not letting them dry enough, it's tricking you. (classic mistake)
--and doing this on a consistent basis will show all kinds of weird problems as we see here in your leaves.
 
Last edited:

ANC

Well-Known Member
Dig a bit with your finger if you use soil, you can't tell shit about moisture by looking at the top.
 

MichiganMedGrower

Well-Known Member
100 percent agreed on the dehumidifiar and the frost with what u said about growing in the winter there the strain u grew was probably a different one to the strain im growing atm with diffarent tolerances but i aggre with what youve said man no rude comments from me every one whos commented on this thread are really cool people not sure how the dehumid can help with the cool temps i know low temps help frost but how can it help with cold temps ive been using for lack of a better word teas like powdered kelp a soil probiotic with kelp and fish and a composted chicken shit product thats been comprest and pelletized i did put a pinch of dolomigjt lime in a few days b4 syptoms 1st showed

It helps because relative humidity is how much water vapor can be held at a specific temperature.

Warm air holds more vapor than cold and they are relative. So raising humidity
yea since u said that iv only been giving it water dude

I think you said you water when the soil is dry a finger down. I wait til they are dry 3/4 the way down the pot. Alarmingly light but plant only showing slight droop at bottom leaves.
 

giglewigle

Well-Known Member
It helps because relative humidity is how much water vapor can be held at a specific temperature.

Warm air holds more vapor than cold and they are relative. So raising humidity



I think you said you water when the soil is dry a finger down. I wait til they are dry 3/4 the way down the pot. Alarmingly light but plant only showing slight droop at bottom leaves.
thats whats tricking me theres no droop what so ever my guessmis immgunna have 2 keep an eye on it until therenslight drooping
 

giglewigle

Well-Known Member
Well that product is high in nitrogen and low in phosphorus. Like I said in my earlier post. To much n not enough p. that product is 2.4-0.4-1.6
ye i think im gunna go back to the bio cannna nutes when she needs it i cant notice any more damage to the bud leaves only to the already affected older bottem leaves
 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
That is why they sell agricultural lime commonly instead of dolomite despite the "trade name" @Dr. Who

It is a mix of dolomite and calcitic lime. Makes the ratio about 30% calcium to 3% magnesium.

Much closer to correct. And over liming is the problem not the products.

Your mis- information is growing as you post.
You've never grown organic! EVER!
You have no real clue to what your talking about. Other then to attempt to harass me.

The #1 organic soil amendment company on the web even tells you almost exactly what I said.

Go in ANY grow shop and the first lime you find is DOLOMITE in powder or pellet's. Next is ground Oyster shell...

Build a soil SAY'S - "NO DOLOMITE LIME: As a rule, don’t use Dolomite lime, regardless of what you may have read in various gardening books, unless you are sure that you need Magnesium. (We don’t need any more magnesium in our mix, I promise) Dolomite is a high Magnesium limestone. Using dolomite will tighten the soil, reducing air in the soil and inducing anaerobic alcohol fermentation or even formaldehyde preservation of organic matter rather than aerobic decomposition. 1 and 3/4 cup prilled (pelletized) fast-acting dolomite lime Again, No Dolomite, it’s awful for your soil, especially with the alternatives available like gypsum."

I do have plenty of Ag lime around the farm. Want some? How about you come and get some?
 
Top