Could use a little guidance

cannabiscrusader

Well-Known Member
And what do you mean by advanced nutrients? The vivosun a&b is made to be used stand alone. In equal parts. If you are adding anything else, you are probably locking out calcium causing the spots. Very dark green too, too much N. That is causing the twisting
 

cannabiscrusader

Well-Known Member
The a and b are made to stand alone. There's really no need to feed the soil with carload if you are using hydro nutrients either.
 

Mr. Kite

Member
Ok...Thank you very much! So, pretty much cut everything and only use the A and B? Should I give just ph water next watering? Or do you have any other recommendations?
 

cannabiscrusader

Well-Known Member
Yeah, just plain water. The happy frog you have it in contains some nutrients as well. So keep that in mind. Back the light off and just plain water until it recovers a bit. Then introduce your a and b at half strength
 

cannabiscrusader

Well-Known Member
Not the end if the world, you are going to miss out on some early growth, but right the ship and it should be cruise control to a decent finish.
 

DeadHeadX

Well-Known Member
Fox farm happy Frog medium
5 gallon fabric pot
Vivosun 100w aerolight
Water 1/4 g every 3-4 days
Vivosun A+B base nutrients and advanced nutrients
20/4 light schedule
Just adjust lights from 300ppfd to 400ppfd
Humidity steady at 58 - 60 %
Average 75 Fahrenheit
4" Tall and 23 days old
Good advice here. I would simply add that the plant should not be on a specific watering schedule but rather receive water when it’s needed. Your top layer definitely looks pretty dry, and as that plant grows it will need more water, more often. Lift the pot slightly to test when it feels light and needs water. Use that as your guide rather than a specific schedule. Water slowly to a bit of runoff, which will take increasingly more water. Autos in five gallon pots can take over a gallon of water up to every other day if they’re growing fast. Depends on the individual plant. But toss the schedule and simply observe the individual plant. Good luck!
 
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