very nice. What is the substrate?I have been feeding these nothing but well water and dynagro grow 7-9-5 since 10 days into bloomView attachment 3513372
You might be right. I know the damage doesn't get better but there still seems to be a very slight progression of the symptoms. Temps are 70-80F all the time, plenty of airflow, and closely monitoring the moisture level in the coco/pots more than I've ever had to do before so I know something else is going on. I have 1 white widow plant in the middle of the table surrounded by plants of unknown genetics(bag seeds) and it is obviously underfed at the rate I'm feeding the other plants. Pale leaves that get worse as you go down the plant. Bottom leaves are starting to die and fall off. But it also suffers from the same problem as all the others. This is why heat stress made/makes sense, or thought it did, idk.@DirtyMcCurdy I dont think the cause was your flooding tweaks, IMO. I think you're first thinking was good. you have a deficiancy. DG grow dont supply much K true but i think the def here is Mg. DG grow contain a high percent of ammonical nitrogen, you were feeding at low EC while you boosted your calcium level mean you create the perfect conditions to increase the deficiency.calcium and ammonical nitrogen are antagonist to magnesium and dg grow dont supply lot of mg , as you know. drop the calmag and it should fix the def quickly.
In my experience , dg is one of the most complete nutes and you dont need to add anything except maybe some potassium in flower (ie ; silicate potassium and potassium sulfate)and is best used with soft water or RO. The only cons of DG ,IMO, is the high percent of ammonical nitrogen... ;(
Yeah, feeding every day. My problem is probably mostly environmental, not completely dialed in yet. I push 'em a little hard probably... 80F and probably more than enough light. I keep humidity up a bit to compensate for higher temps and because running a de-hue adds more heat, which I can't do anything about at the moment. Still 80F isn't that warm but I need to upgrade ac and the de-hue.the plants that i'm feeding dyna-gro to are getting 4ml in veg and 5ml in flower. i'm a relative noob to using it, but those levels seem to be working great for me. are you feeding everyday dirty? one little trick in coco that i picked up from a forum and can vouch for is: once the roots are established don't let the pots dry out anymore. feed every day or even multiple times a day. those plants pictured are in coco weedmart and thanks brother.
The 7-9-5 Grow formula wont cause any issues if used correctly in an adequate indoor environment.Yeah, feeding every day. My problem is probably mostly environmental, not completely dialed in yet. I push 'em a little hard probably... 80F and probably more than enough light. I keep humidity up a bit to compensate for higher temps and because running a de-hue adds more heat, which I can't do anything about at the moment. Still 80F isn't that warm but I need to upgrade ac and the de-hue.
However, I think a little of it is a combination of environmental issues compounded slightly by nutrient issues. Slightly underfed, which I was worried about from the start, and maybe a little too much P in the ratio. I will try using Foliage Pro instead of the grow on future grows. A little too much P and maybe lacking a little sulfur can both lead to burnt tips and too much P can also lead to other deficiencies.
dg grow not your isssue, once you cut the calmag i think you solved it. the damage is done tho... it wont recover but if your new growth is healthy it means your plants are fines.Your issue IMO ; theres too much ammonical nitrogen.Yeah, feeding every day. My problem is probably mostly environmental, not completely dialed in yet. I push 'em a little hard probably... 80F and probably more than enough light. I keep humidity up a bit to compensate for higher temps and because running a de-hue adds more heat, which I can't do anything about at the moment. Still 80F isn't that warm but I need to upgrade ac and the de-hue.
However, I think a little of it is a combination of environmental issues compounded slightly by nutrient issues. Slightly underfed, which I was worried about from the start, and maybe a little too much P in the ratio. I will try using Foliage Pro instead of the grow on future grows. A little too much P and maybe lacking a little sulfur can both lead to burnt tips and too much P can also lead to other deficiencies.
Still working on it.The 7-9-5 Grow formula wont cause any issues if used correctly in an adequate indoor environment.
The differences between ammoniacal and nitrate nitrogen is something I have reasearched in the past and I agree with you about ammoniacal nitrogen not being an ideal source of nitrogen.dg grow not your isssue, once you cut the calmag i think you solved it. the damage is done tho... it wont recover but if your new growth is healthy it means your plants are fines.Your issue IMO ; theres too much ammonical nitrogen.
the only advantage of FP is slightly lower ammonical nitrogen(NH4), but IMO, its still too high.
the source of nitrogen is very important because nh4 compete with lot of elements and his uptake is much more complex than nitrate.That why I'm not a DG fans.Theres more cons than benefit with nh4
In short,'' the conversion of nitrates to amino acids occurs in the leaf. This process is fuelled by solar energy, which makes it an energy-efficient process. Ammonium has to be converted into organic N compounds in the roots. This process is fuelled by carbohydrates, which are at the expense of other plant life processes, such as plant growth and fruit fill.'' source : http://www.kno3.org/product-features-a-benefits/nitrate-no3-versus-ammonium-nh4
100% nitrate based fert are not optimal because the ph will constantly rise... once you add some nh4 , the ph stay stable because the plants regulate his ph. The optimal is a balanced mix of no3/nh4 to keep your ph stable while having a low ammonical nitrogen content. 80-20 seem to be the optimal ratio in veg while 90-10 seem optimal in flo.
PS: When using a fert with high NH4 percent, theres few things to care about. -root zone should aways be ''warm'' atleast 20 C to ensure nitrification. Cold temp will reduce nitrification and nH4 might start to accumulate and create toxicity.
-if your using an inert media , you might need to use carbonate and buffers to stay in the ph range.
-Some microbial product might help you deal with excess of NH4.Fulvic and humic for example.
No. Not testing run-off. I would but they are all sitting in a flood table and I would have to take each one out, feed, then test run-off. Pain in the ass.i would certainly consider 80 degrees with with high humidity an adequate environment. its a better environment than mine probably. the flower room pictured is 75 and 55 rh. are you testing your runoff dirty?
Do you lower the ph in the r/w?? Or just tuck them in? Do you leave them in a container that has water in it or just rely on the humidity dome?
Any temperature concerns, like a heat pad?
thx for the quick reply.