yellowing and/or deficiency?

Low humidity is making your leaves turn down. Its a plant response to conserve moisture. You want those leaves pointing to the sky.
Pretty much the sativa is the only weeping leaves. The humidifier I'm using will moisten up my whole bedroom but I can't get it to even dent the rh in there.
 
Watered and fed today. With the excess water and the humidifier and the exhaust reduced, the rh was up to 35%. Will update what it looks like tomorrow.
 
polishpollac. post: 11722102 said:
those leaves look like they're low on nitrogen. not sure what else it could be right now.
Thanks for the reply. I know I'm killing yield here so I need them to turn around.
 
Roots organic 5 ml line. i was at full strength but flushed with cal mag as a guess for three waters. Now back at at half strength with added cal mag. And the one plant has a bit extra nitrogen. 78-81 degrees.
 
[QUandSunny Organics, post: 11725407, member: 896626"]What nutrients are you using and at what strength?
Soil?
RO or tap water?
HIghest temp in your room?[/QUOTE]
Oh and i think the soil may be the original culprit. I have realized one plant got a different soil and two received a bit mixed in. Some of the clones I cut have similar looking issues. Could this be root binding possibly?
 

Sunny Organics

Well-Known Member
[QUandSunny Organics, post: 11725407, member: 896626"]What nutrients are you using and at what strength?
Soil?
RO or tap water?
HIghest temp in your room?
Oh and i think the soil may be the original culprit. I have realized one plant got a different soil and two received a bit mixed in. Some of the clones I cut have similar looking issues. Could this be root binding possibly?[/QUOTE]
if it's root bound your whole plant will start drooping down like if it was underwatered, you will also see discoloration starting from the bottom of the plant. If you noticed stunted growth, chances are it is root bound but i doubt it. Like someone said earlier, it might just be the leaves dying off which is completely normal. Goodluck bro, stay lifted. :bigjoint::peace::leaf:
 

polishpollack

Well-Known Member
what you probably should do is start with something stable and known to have a good reputation. I don't know where you live but the states we have a few potting soils that are pretty dependable. Foxfarm's ocean forest is an example. seems to have enough fert in it to last quite a while, but this amount of fert tends to cause the appearance of leaf tip yellowing or browning. as the plant grows, the discoloration tends to stop. sometimes it never happens, other times it does. depends on the plant strain and how sensitive it is to fert. I'd find a decent soil if I was you and trust it, water it then let it dry out before you water again. as plants grow they need more water so you would probably water more frequently. you can web search in your area for good potting soil.
 
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