Yes Ill post up some new pics tonight... I have ran into another issue and hopefully you and some other ppl can detect it.any new pic's comming? the smell must be gooood.
Nice I will def. check your grow out... Yeah this is my first go at all this so I have run into a lot of mistakes. I think I just ran into another, Like I said ill post some pics up tonight when I get off work and see what the issue may be. Im sure that the issues I had preflower did stunt my growth, and caused more males then I should have had.Hey man,
Plants are looking great! I started mine right around the same time as you, but made a LOT of mistakes along the way. I'd say my plants now, at d35 of flowering, look more like yours did at day 20. It's good to see what mine could have been at this point, but now they're coming along just fine.
Wonder if yours were stunted at all by some of the issues you ran into?
Yeah its just random bagseed Ive gotten from different sacks, why? lol... and I believe in one of the earlier pages there is a couple pictures and descriptions on the soil choice.omg i just looked at ur whole journal are you saying that this is just some commerical seedy weed some swchagg please let me no
according to PLANT ABUSE CHART
Magnesium (Mg) deficiency.
Magnesium deficiency will exhibit a yellowing (which may turn brown) and interveinal chlorosis (brown spotting) beginning in the older leaves. The older leaves will be the first to develop interveinal chlorosis. Starting at leaf margin or tip and progressing inward between the veins.
This can be quickly resolved by watering with 1 tablespoon Epsom salts/gallon of water. Until you can correct nutrient lockout, try foliar feeding. That way the plants get all the nitrogen and Mg they need. The plants can be foliar feed at ½ teaspoon/quart of Epsom salts (first powdered and dissolved in some hot water). When mixing up soil, use 2 teaspoon dolomite lime per gallon of soil.
If the starting water is above 200 ppm, that is pretty hard water, that will lock out mg with all of the calcium in the water. Either add a 1/4 teaspoon per gallon of epsom salts or lime (both will effectively reduce the lockout or invest into a reverse osmosis water filter.