I appreciate your advice and I'm sure you're right but I'm certain they got too cold or maybe even froze. Here is a pic from 2 days earlierIt is not the heater.
The plants are drowning in too large pots.
Add to that that it looks like soil.
So when it gets cold the bacteria that converts urea to ammonia can keep ticking over while the ones that process ammonia goes dormant.
Wanna guess what happens when you pour ammonia on your root zone?
I would pull the plants out of those pots, shake off the loose soil and replant in a smaller pot with dryer medium.
Does that affect your advice at all? It sounds like a good plan. Also, they were in an outdoor structure, I brought them in the house tonightIt is not the heater.
The plants are drowning in too large pots.
Add to that that it looks like soil.
So when it gets cold the bacteria that converts urea to ammonia can keep ticking over while the ones that process ammonia goes dormant.
Wanna guess what happens when you pour ammonia on your root zone?
I would pull the plants out of those pots, shake off the loose soil and replant in a smaller pot with dryer medium.
Yes, I tested the soil after this happened and N is WAY too high. Right before the freeze I adjusted the ph (it was at 7, 7.2) and I now know I used 2X the amt needed. Smh. These guys were in veg for only 6 weeks because too many germinated and I ended up with 30! I'm in a highly unfriendly state and I live in town with 3 police officers on my street. I was able to get down to 7 after separating males and giving a few away.Frost bit, N is too high and some were not exactly stable either.
Cold is bad. If the soil & roots got too cold like ANC said. Your bound for trouble...looks like all you can do it try and see if you get any recovery.
I doubt it, yet it may struggle to continue a bit at the core....Leaves look like toast.
If it starts to dry up, dead.