cat of curiosity
Well-Known Member
blind leading the blind around here. the soil is dry, the plants are wilted. WATER THEM and they'll be back to normal in under a half hour. unless you don't, and they get worse, then those leaves will die.
Right. However, you seemed to have missed the part about 95f degree temps and him asking how that could be remedied.blind leading the blind around here. the soil is dry, the plants are wilted. WATER THEM and they'll be back to normal in under a half hour. unless you don't, and they get worse, then those leaves will die.
Sorry, I still do not have a good picture of your room. So you have air getting sucked in. What is the temp of that air. Do you have anything exhausting warm air out of the room? Is the room warm because of your light? You need to exhaust out that rising warm air.im in a loft and iv set up wooden stocks so to speak. wrapped the reflective tape round it so it is almost like a room with king span at the top. i have an extractor sucking air in from outside
nope, didn't miss it. as a matter of fact, i saw everyone pitching in saying overwater/too high temps. both are wrong. it gets to 110f here in the summer, outdoor plants do fine in that heat. AS LONG AS THEY HAVE WATER. the reason they wilted is because they got dry. if watered once seen, they'd have perked back up. if he didn't water, and the heat got that high today, his plants are quick-dried and dead. probably not smokeable, but that's how it goes sometimes...Right. However, you seemed to have missed the part about 95f degree temps and him asking how that could be remedied.
or one could notice a drought wilt, and say, ''water it''. not everyone is that experienced though...There is a shit load of info you are leaving out...medium, nutes, light source, ph balances, ventilation etc etc. I mean you said in an earlier post you were using nutes A and B...but you never said what A and B are! You need to have better pics...turn off the HPS...makes it near impossible to see any issues. Take pictures of your entire setup from a couple of angles...show us what ya got. Do these things and better responses you will get.
There's way more oxygen outside. To be able to compare outdoor to indoor temp wise wouldn't the indoor need to be co2 enriched so it would be able to handle those higher temps? water is fine but at some point the plant will start losing water faster then it can drink it.when it reaches that point wouldn't adding water not really be a solution to the underlining problem?nope, didn't miss it. as a matter of fact, i saw everyone pitching in saying overwater/too high temps. both are wrong. it gets to 110f here in the summer, outdoor plants do fine in that heat. AS LONG AS THEY HAVE WATER. the reason they wilted is because they got dry. if watered once seen, they'd have perked back up. if he didn't water, and the heat got that high today, his plants are quick-dried and dead. probably not smokeable, but that's how it goes sometimes...
remedying the heat will be a bitch in the attic, and won't be accomplished without an ac. but however, to fix the wilt, a watering would have sufficed.
i hope he watered them...
Like hydraulic lock, stops loss of water by evap, go's all floppy and can die,can cause the cell walls to collapse turgor problem's etc, its not what you want, lightly spray or mist helps cool the leaf so it might re-star transpiring again (if done in time)....but doubtful.the plant will start losing water faster then it can drink it
nope, didn't miss it. as a matter of fact, i saw everyone pitching in saying overwater/too high temps. both are wrong. it gets to 110f here in the summer, outdoor plants do fine in that heat. AS LONG AS THEY HAVE WATER. the reason they wilted is because they got dry. if watered once seen, they'd have perked back up. if he didn't water, and the heat got that high today, his plants are quick-dried and dead. probably not smokeable, but that's how it goes sometimes...
remedying the heat will be a bitch in the attic, and won't be accomplished without an ac. but however, to fix the wilt, a watering would have sufficed.
i hope he watered them...
Well, all I can say to that is...or one could notice a drought wilt, and say, ''water it''. not everyone is that experienced though...
Is a "loft" an attic? Not where I come from. 95 degrees IS certainly not optimal and clearly is something to try and remedy.nope, didn't miss it. as a matter of fact, i saw everyone pitching in saying overwater/too high temps. both are wrong. it gets to 110f here in the summer, outdoor plants do fine in that heat. AS LONG AS THEY HAVE WATER. the reason they wilted is because they got dry. if watered once seen, they'd have perked back up. if he didn't water, and the heat got that high today, his plants are quick-dried and dead. probably not smokeable, but that's how it goes sometimes...
remedying the heat will be a bitch in the attic, and won't be accomplished without an ac. but however, to fix the wilt, a watering would have sufficed.
i hope he watered them...
Except yourey leaving something out. It does get over a hundred there but the roots are in the ground at 65 degrees.nope, didn't miss it. as a matter of fact, i saw everyone pitching in saying overwater/too high temps. both are wrong. it gets to 110f here in the summer, outdoor plants do fine in that heat. AS LONG AS THEY HAVE WATER. the reason they wilted is because they got dry. if watered once seen, they'd have perked back up. if he didn't water, and the heat got that high today, his plants are quick-dried and dead. probably not smokeable, but that's how it goes sometimes...
remedying the heat will be a bitch in the attic, and won't be accomplished without an ac. but however, to fix the wilt, a watering would have sufficed.
i hope he watered them...