Nute burn?

letam06

Well-Known Member
i know that they suffer from overwatering. but other than that do they look nute burned. at 4.5 weeks i gave them a mild fert mix of gh flora series. 1 tsp of micro, gro, bloom per gallon. i also tried to fim one of them. it was my first try. dont really know if it worked. any advice?
 

bakeddude

Active Member
Ouch, MJ doesn't like mulch and all that woody stuff at all. You would really benefit from a transplant into some higher quality soil. Try Fox Farms Ocean Forest or Happy Frog. Also try Promix. They are all good brands.
 

letam06

Well-Known Member
very good to know. that was the best organic potting soil i could find until recently. i just found a hydroshop about 20 min from me. will they sell that potting soil there?. they should right. they carry hydro and soil ferts. along with soil ph meters. i didnt check soil when i was in there last time.
 

303

Well-Known Member
what strain is that bro? first pic looks fine, second pic looks overwatered. they'll be fine, leave em alone. make sure p.h is 6.5. you'll be fine. i'd suggest transplanting in a larger pot and setting them into flower in the coming week. can't tell from the pic what kind of fim job you gave them, its not rocket science though. they are not burned at all. good luck.
by the way, wtf is in the pots accompanying the plants?
 

bakeddude

Active Member
they are little states that tell you when the soil is dry. lol.
What the dude above said may be true...but if you just transplant them outta that shit there in now and get them into some good soil they will correct themselves. I know since I use it that FF Ocean Forest has natural pH buffers in it so it will do everything it can to keep your soil at 6.5 pH.
 

letam06

Well-Known Member
the ph of my soil is around 6.8. i know in the gh flora series ferts i have they have added calcium and magnesium and ph buffers to correct that problem. also the soil that i am using has some dolomite lime mixed in it. says on the bag. it consists of sphagnum peat moss and/or reed sedge peat. bark fines. composted manures. composted shell fish shells. perline. and dolomite lime. it is master nursery gardeners gold organic potting soil.
 
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