OMG WHAts GOIN ON WITH MY PLANTS

EvilRx

Member
guys my plants just started acting up like this.i use fox farm ocean medium with water at a p.h of 6.8.i feed my plant a mix of fox farm and super thrive everyfeeding .in the pics u can see that the plats are turning yellow at the tips and the lower leaves are becoming completly yellow:(PLz guys what should i do should i flush it out with some diluted nutes or what????????





 

c5rftw

Well-Known Member
Wow, i have never seen irregularities like that, ill PM my bro to help you.. btw he is a doctor
 

moash

New Member
And i have jesus here to help too! He says your plants are burning from over watering and over fertilization.
i think jesus may be wrong....where do u get overwatering



a typical water schedule is feed,water,water,feed...u shouldnt feed everytime
but that looks odd to me
were those peices eaten away before it started burning
and the 2nd to last pic looks like N def or cal/mag def
 

c5rftw

Well-Known Member
transplantin to a new soil never hurts, unless you do it wrong. Try that first if you feel obligated to do something right now
 

Bubba Kushman

Well-Known Member
Looks like the first signs of nute burn. The Fox Farms allready has nutes in it and then you are adding a bunch more. Overfeeding burns the tips first, then whole leaves will start to fry. It also creates deficencys. I would lower the ph a touch. The range for soil is 6.2-6.8 max. Next do a flush, then use water only a couple times. Then start a cycle of feeding every other watering. Even when they get bigger. I only feed my girls a mix of B1 and Clonex every other watering till they are about 4 weks old. Then its nutes @ 600-700ppm till flower. Then I only bump it to 800-1000ppm max in late flower. Just resist over feeding and over watering and you will be fine. Good Luck!
 

damnbigbudz

Well-Known Member
I APOLOGIZE FOR EARLIER. but from my experience that is over fert and look at the edges of his leaves they are curling upwards, WEIRD. that makes me think it is also in the beginning stages of over watering. My advice? distilled water or water that has been left out for 24 hours for the next couple days... AND LEAVE THE PLANT ALONE. that is always my problem, if I followed the directions with the nutes and stuff then I assume that im just fussing with it to much AND USUALLY im right and the plant perks back up (BUT THERE HAVE ALSO BEEN TIMES WHERE I DID THAT AND CAME BACK TO DEAD PLANTS) distinguishing deficiencies and administering the proper cure seems like the hardest part about all this sometimes.
 

moash

New Member
looks like ur leaves r twisting also
its either too hot or Mg def which i suppose can be locked up from over fert
 

Doctor Cannabis

Well-Known Member
This is fun, it's like one of those mystery novels and everybody guesses who the killer may be.

1. Your plant is overfed. Signs of a mild N toxicity are present. Due to the N tox, your plant has produced more leaf tissue, the leaves have become thicker and contain more water.

2. Strangely there are only 3 leaves affected by this mystery burn, neither bottom or top leaves, so it's neither a deficiency, nor a nute burn.

3. Yet one burnt leaf is above another, and on the other side, the other affected one has no other leaves under it. This leads me to think that someone (or even you!) spilled one of the following on the plant and didn't realize or have the guts to fess up: pure nutes, alcohol, chlorine or a pH stabilizer.

4. The thick tissue + the chemical burn will cause damage that most growers will not recognize because, cmon... the odds of these two happening is pretty rare.

Conclusion: not much else you can do about it, maybe take care of the N tox. The burn is there to stay, but won't advance in any way.
 

Mcgician

Well-Known Member
This is fun, it's like one of those mystery novels and everybody guesses who the killer may be.

1. Your plant is overfed. Signs of a mild N toxicity are present. Due to the N tox, your plant has produced more leaf tissue, the leaves have become thicker and contain more water.

2. Strangely there are only 3 leaves affected by this mystery burn, neither bottom or top leaves, so it's neither a deficiency, nor a nute burn.

3. Yet one burnt leaf is above another, and on the other side, the other affected one has no other leaves under it. This leads me to think that someone (or even you!) spilled one of the following on the plant and didn't realize or have the guts to fess up: pure nutes, alcohol, chlorine or a pH stabilizer.

4. The thick tissue + the chemical burn will cause damage that most growers will not recognize because, cmon... the odds of these two happening is pretty rare.

Conclusion: not much else you can do about it, maybe take care of the N tox. The burn is there to stay, but won't advance in any way.
I agree with him. :joint:
 

moash

New Member
This is fun, it's like one of those mystery novels and everybody guesses who the killer may be.

1. Your plant is overfed. Signs of a mild N toxicity are present. Due to the N tox, your plant has produced more leaf tissue, the leaves have become thicker and contain more water.

2. Strangely there are only 3 leaves affected by this mystery burn, neither bottom or top leaves, so it's neither a deficiency, nor a nute burn.

3. Yet one burnt leaf is above another, and on the other side, the other affected one has no other leaves under it. This leads me to think that someone (or even you!) spilled one of the following on the plant and didn't realize or have the guts to fess up: pure nutes, alcohol, chlorine or a pH stabilizer.

4. The thick tissue + the chemical burn will cause damage that most growers will not recognize because, cmon... the odds of these two happening is pretty rare.

Conclusion: not much else you can do about it, maybe take care of the N tox. The burn is there to stay, but won't advance in any way.
nice....didnt think about spilling anything on itbongsmilie
 
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