Not sure whats going on with these? Help!

d33p

Member
First Grow
Plants are being grown in ReadyGro (coco based product, have a fox forest bag cooking with additives for the next run). Seeds are unknown bag variety. CFL lighting (has caused small burning threw out)
Vegged for almost 2 months, had some issues in the beginning treating the coco like soil and wasn't watering enough.
Now I water them daily with Reverse Osmosis Water + Botanicare Nutes + "CaMg+" with a PH of 5.5-5.8 depending on the previous days runoff.
I water them every day with PH R.O. water, but do not give them nutes every day. I've been training the plants to be bushy and grow sideways. I'm still not sure if any of them are female.
RH is usually between 20-35, Temps of 70F-79F (it has never gone outside of this range)

I just switched to 12/12 light schedule about a week ago. They are not in flowering stage yet and I think my problem may be the fact that I switched to flowering nutes already. Thinking they need some nitrogen?

CloseUp (1).jpgCloseUp (2).jpgCloseUp (3).jpgGroup.jpg

They were exploding with growth the last couple of days, I'm not sure whats wrong if anything?
 
Had a small amount of flys and some larva in runoff about 2 weeks ago. Since then I've soil drenched them twice with azamax and foilar sprayed them once with Green Light Neem oil (never again buying green light it doesn't have Azadactrin). The plants looked fine days after each of these applications and I do not see a visible egg/bug anywhere on my plants (used a 100x hand microscope).
 
In chat I was told its probably fungus gnats in my roots. Anyone else feel this could be the culprit? I did see larva and some flys about a week ago. However, I've been trying to rectify them with Neem products azamax and neem oil.
 
Your plant looks good.
Don't expect to see any flowering right away,she's still getting adjusted to her new light schedule.
Give her another week to start showing signs of flowering
 
Thanks for the feedback, its actually 5 plants btw. All under training to be grown horizontal.
 
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