She’s on week 11.You're starving it. Stopping rushing it. When you hit 10 weeks then come back and ask.
It will take her longer if she doesn't have what she needs to mature. Feed her up till the end, and if you insist straight water wait till the last couple waterings but it's not necessary imo. For sure at this point she is in need of nutrients, she still has a ways to go and at week 11 you don't want to wait everlong.She’s on week 11.
Don't freak out over the yellow leaves. Cannabis, an annual plant, does that naturally toward the end of their lives. You don't have to feed it, and I don't recommend feeding it because it may or may not affect the quality of smoke.Seems to be more and more yellow everyday, is that normal? Haven’t given her nutes in about a week as I get closer to harvest.
after they finish swelling, I keep feeding half strength till I decide it's a week out. Then I water with plain, ph'ed water one more time, and let her ride till i chop.Seems to be more and more yellow everyday, is that normal? Haven’t given her nutes in about a week as I get closer to harvest. View attachment 5168571
For God’s sake don’t stop feeding her now….that’s why she’s yellowing…..this is an important time for the plant to have everything it needs.Seems to be more and more yellow everyday, is that normal? Haven’t given her nutes in about a week as I get closer to harvest. View attachment 5168571
I don't know what book you're referring to, but I disagree that (nitrogen) feeding is essential during end-stage chlorosis.For God’s sake don’t stop feeding her now….that’s why she’s yellowing…..this is an important time for the plant to have everything it needs.
For a plant to finish out properly, like the book says it should, it must be healthy and unstressed.
A little yellowing is fine as part of the natural senescence of the plant….but yellowing from starving is different. Give her a light dose of whatever you’ve been feeding and keep her happy.
Maybe I stated things wrong or maybe they are being misconstrued…..I dunno.I don't know what book you're referring to, but I disagree that (nitrogen) feeding is essential during end-stage chlorosis.
My concern is that feeding will stress the plant by trying to fix a nutrient deficiency that doesn't actually exist in the soil itself. The plant may automatically bottleneck nutrient absorption as a natural process. Between my personal experience and various online information, I can't imagine this being a problem in need of a solution.
Short plants typically are autos but you can top or scrog to keep plants shortOops, just noticed your question was posted back in July. No doubt you've been enjoying the fruits of your labor for a few months now.
I wonder, how did you keep your plant so short? Did you top a bunch? Also, I noticed you were keeping your RH around 40. Is that to low?