New grower, Is this N Toxicity?

mean.green

Well-Known Member
I have been researching over the last view days of N toxicity. People describe the problem clawing that looks like a bear claw or eagle claw. So far the recommendations have been to flush. But before I do that I would like to be sure. I am only asking because I do not see any yellowing. Or any other symptoms other than the claw. People with similar problems say that it is an N toxic or ph deficiency.

I'm using fox farms happy frog soil with 33% perlite mixed. Ph of soil about 6.3-6.5 ph. Water ph stays between 6.0-6.5. I wait until everything is dry before I water. Day temps 77F-84F; night temps 69F-73F. Humidity stays below 50%. Fans circulating air 24/7. I have not fed any Nutrients.

The front one shows mild clawing but the back one is doing it pretty badly.
This on 3/16 IMG_4650.JPG
This is on 3/18
IMG_4661 (1).jpg
 
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mean.green

Well-Known Member
Another thread said that it had to do with watering fan leaves, but I quit watering the fan leaves since 2/16 Wednesday. It could need more time to recover, although watering the fan leaves might not even be my problem.
 

AbeFroman

Well-Known Member
N toxicity typically will give you very dark green leaves. I don't see it in your plants, and they look healthy overall to me.

I know clawing can also result from overwatering to much light off the top of my head. I'm not very experienced in soil so I really have no advice on how to remedy your clawing unless your running a high power light to close. If so I would reccomend raising it if so to see if that helps.
 

Resinhound

Well-Known Member
Reduce your daytime temps a bit if you can,what and how much are you feeding them? To me it looks like maybe ec is a tad high along with temps getting borderline high is causing some stress to the plant.I dont see any tip burn.I wouldnt flush it,but next feed give it a half strength and see what happens.
 

mean.green

Well-Known Member
Reduce your daytime temps a bit if you can,what and how much are you feeding them? To me it looks like maybe ec is a tad high along with temps getting borderline high is causing some stress to the plant.I dont see any tip burn.I wouldnt flush it,but next feed give it a half strength and see what happens.
I have not fed them anything. Just tap water ph'd at between 6.0-6.5.
I have also kept temps between 75F-80F today to help. But Im having a hard time keeping temps below 79F because im running 3 125w cfl lamps.


N toxicity typically will give you very dark green leaves. I don't see it in your plants, and they look healthy overall to me.

I know clawing can also result from overwatering to much light off the top of my head. I'm not very experienced in soil so I really have no advice on how to remedy your clawing unless your running a high power light to close. If so I would reccomend raising it if so to see if that helps.
I keep the lights at about 2-4 inches. It's a 125w 6400k CFL. I will raise it to 5-6 inches and see if that helps.
 

Resinhound

Well-Known Member
I have not fed them anything. Just tap water ph'd at between 6.0-6.5.
I have also kept temps between 75F-80F today to help. But Im having a hard time keeping temps below 79F because im running 3 125w cfl lamps.



I keep the lights at about 2-4 inches. It's a 125w 6400k CFL. I will raise it to 5-6 inches and see if that helps.
If ypu havent fed anything in happyfrog,its probable heat/intensity stress.Happyfrog is a pretty light mix if I understand it correctly,never used it before.
 

mean.green

Well-Known Member
Well I guess too much light is a better problem to have than too little light. I will keep you guys updated to let you know if raising the lights helps. Thank you, Resinhound and Abefroman for your quick responses!!!!!!
 

mean.green

Well-Known Member
You guys were right about the heat being too much for them. Last night when I went to turn the lights on I noticed the coning was major, therefore the heat was too much at (83F).
After keeping the room, below 75F, with the lights on; they recovered in ten hours at temps of 70F-75F, with no more signs of heat stress.

The clawing is taking longer to recover, so far its been about 24 hours since I raised the lights from 2-4 inches; to 6 inches and they look a better than before.
 
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