Alright I’ll cut down on watering & already removed pest stripLooks like over watering and pest strips are bad
With coco you either have to water more than once a day or let them dry out a bit like soil till roots are established so they get enough oxygen. I water like soil till the roots are good and grownAlright I’ll cut down on watering & already removed pest strip
Alright yea I’ll usually water and wait 2 days max for it to dryWith coco you either have to water more than once a day or let them dry out a bit like soil till roots are established so they get enough oxygen. I water like soil till the roots are good and grown
Might have to water everydayAlright yea I’ll usually water and wait 2 days max for it to dry
So do I still have hope on reviving them ? Or are they done for now?With coco you either have to water more than once a day or let them dry out a bit like soil till roots are established so they get enough oxygen. I water like soil till the roots are good and grown
I think it looks like a magnesium deficiency and one of the symptoms is leaf tips curling up along with interveinal chlorosis and as it gets worse brown spots appearing on older and middle growth leaves first.Okay thank you I didn’t know what to call it exactly but how can I fix my problem ? Epsom salts?
AlI think it looks like a magnesium deficiency and one of the symptoms is leaf tips curling up along with interveinal chlorosis and as it gets worse brown spots appearing on older and middle growth leaves first.
Epsom Salts will supply Mg and S and the stuff you get at the drugstore is just fine only make sure it is unscented with no other additives.
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Alright yea that seems like my problem, any good salts you’d recommend me looking into?I think it looks like a magnesium deficiency and one of the symptoms is leaf tips curling up along with interveinal chlorosis and as it gets worse brown spots appearing on older and middle growth leaves first.
Epsom Salts will supply Mg and S and the stuff you get at the drugstore is just fine only make sure it is unscented with no other additives.
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Yeah or longer than a few days when the pot is light to pick up. Over watering causes nute lockoutAlright yea I’ll usually water and wait 2 days max for it to dry
I mean I have been doing that that’s why im curious on as to why I’d have nute lockoutsYeah or longer than a few days when the pot is light to pick up. Over watering causes nute lockout
Yeah. Epsom Salts. Can usually find a little 1 pint/ 500ml size milk container at the drug store for a few bux. I get the huge clear jug ones for use as a hot bath soak.Al
Alright yea that seems like my problem, any good salts you’d recommend me looking into?
Alright so they aren’t done for?Yeah. Epsom Salts. Can usually find a little 1 pint/ 500ml size milk container at the drug store for a few bux. I get the huge clear jug ones for use as a hot bath soak.
Shouldn't be. I'd maybe get them in proper mix and maybe larger pots if these are the clones in smaller pots.Alright so they aren’t done for?
budzbuddha have you ever heard of or experienced diatomaceous earth water-logging roots and essentially creating an overwatered plant?FFOF is pretty nute dense right out of bag and can power a plant for weeks by itself.
Feeding ( recharging ) can be done simply by adding more fresh soil to containers ( top dressing ).
No other nute lines necessary. You are probably facing antagonism between different nute sources ( I.E. adding flora series on top of the already nute charged soil ). And you said “ no ph “ which would be done to that liquid line when using.
Straight soil , no ph is fine.
Diatomaceous Earth once wet becomes a messy slurry and just kind of causes issues.
Fungus gnats can happen in soil bags but there are less heavy handed ways to control ( yellow stickies - adult flyers ) and dunks for soil drenching.
Not really … Diatomaceous earth is effective dry once wet it becomes a slurry mess. Never really thought it was a good pest management solution because of that very reason.budzbuddha have you ever heard of or experienced diatomaceous earth water-logging roots and essentially creating an overwatered plant?
I ask because I use Rootwise Mycorrhiza Complete and it’s 80% diatomaceous earth. DE is known for retaining more moisture so I’m wondering if this has been messing with my failed grows recently…failed due to overwateringNot really … Diatomaceous earth is effective dry once wet it becomes a slurry mess. Never really thought it was a good pest management solution because of that very reason.
Only way i think it would work as a topdress for pests is if plant is bottom watered instead of top watered.
Mosquito dunks / Yellow sticky ( for adults ) and other products would be cleaner approach.