My Plants Have Spots

winestill

Member
Can anyone tell me what is wrong with my plants?
This is my Artemisia absinthium
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These spots seems to be black/grayish and also yellow

and this is cherry tomato plant
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The leaf is curling in to itself and has a white spot on one leaf.
It also seems to me that the pland is kind of pale green to yellowish.

I have 150W red cfl light and Ebb & flow system
Water tray is holding 24 L of water and the upper tray is 19 L

Since I'm using nutrition from my country I don't know how
much of it I should use. Can anyone calculate how much of
this nutrition I should have?

Here is the ingredients in 500 ml:
Nitrogen (N) 0.27%
Phosphate (P2O5) 2.0%
Potash (K2O) 3.0%
Sulphate (S3O) 6.1%
Chloride (Cl) 6.7%
Silica (SiO2) 0.2%
Iodine (I) 0.9%
Bromine (Br) 0.8%
Soda (Na2O) 18.9%
Magnesia (MgO) 0.58%
Lime (CaO) 0.44%
Alumina (Al2O3) 0.23%
Copper 40 ppm
Cobalt 4 ppm
Nickel 24 ppm
Zink 100 ppm
Molybdenum 10 ppm
Manganese 40 ppm
Boron 1 ppm
 
So other know what you are talking about since you failed to provide information

Artemisia absinthium (absinthium, absinthe wormwood, wormwood, common wormwood, Green Ginger or grand wormwood) is a species of wormwood, native to temperate regions of Eurasia and northern Africa.

It is a herbaceous perennial plant, with a hard, woody rhizome. The stems are straight, growing to 0.8-1.2 m (rarely 1.5 m) tall, grooved, branched, and silvery-green. The leaves are spirally arranged, greenish-grey above and white below, covered with silky silvery-white trichomes, and bearing minute oil-producing glands; the basal leaves are up to 25 cm long, bipinnate to tripinnate with long petioles, with the cauline leaves (those on the stem) smaller, 5–10 cm long, less divided, and with short petioles; the uppermost leaves can be both simple and sessile (without a petiole). Its flowers are pale yellow, tubular, and clustered in spherical bent-down heads (capitula), which are in turn clustered in leafy and branched panicles. Flowering is from early summer to early autumn; pollination is anemophilous. The fruit is a small achene; seed dispersal is by gravity.

It grows naturally on uncultivated, arid ground, on rocky slopes, and at the edge of footpaths and fields.
 
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