Leaf issue on flowering outdoor Durban Poison

Hi All, first time grower and would like some experts to have a quick look at my pics of flowering Durban Poison.
The leaves , mainly sugar leads have started turning In The last week.
I have start by saying we have had a incredibly wet summer. 400mm (nearly 16 inches) of rain in just over two weeks.
She has held up incredibly well I think. Found a few little nodes with bud rot, but mainly ok.
I'm now looking at the leaves and my instant thought is soggy soil. It's in the ground so can't move it, but possibly a deficiency as the majority of the fan leaves are good
Does anyone have any thoughts

I'm not exactly sure how long she has left. Pistles are still white and tris clear. She probably started flowering end of February (Southern Hemisphere)

*Also note the plant is a deep purple and that the buds are really deep in colour and aside from a couple of popcorn buds no budrot
Thanks
 

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Mmm.. ok Thankyou guys
I had a quick peek this morning at it looks some what improved then yesterday. Maybe Magnesium?
At this stage I don't think I will do anything drastic unless it get worse. Getting excited I think a few weeks to ago !
 

jbcCT

Well-Known Member
I think the worst thing you could do is starting throwing nutrients at those plants. I can't see from the pictures what kind of pots are you growing in?

Buddy of mine was using 5 gallon plastic buckets one summer and got hit with the same thing. The plastic heating in the sun caused the color dye in the bucket to basically poison his plants. At season end we pulled them and the dye stuck to the root ball.
 

waterproof808

Well-Known Member
Buddy of mine was using 5 gallon plastic buckets one summer and got hit with the same thing. The plastic heating in the sun caused the color dye in the bucket to basically poison his plants. At season end we pulled them and the dye stuck to the root ball.
Most non-food grade buckets are full of carcinogenic BPA, and you see people using them for making hash and stuff calling themselves "extract artists" and what not. Whats interesting though, is that low-doses of BPA have actually shown to be beneficial for certain plants.
 
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