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I’m currently growing 4 strains in my small tent before I put these babies outside. But 3 out of the 4 are having problems. I’m wondering what kind of deficiency or deficiencies they have & what I could do about fixing this. I’m using dry amendments & basic organic soil.
 

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berten-ernie420

Well-Known Member
4/4 look to be having problems my friend. All look root bound, and I'd say all are severely dehydrated looking at the color of the dirt and how the leaves are all drooping. The ph is also off in the three you mention having problems. But pot up firstly, get them roots some room to grow, use a stronger soil, or better nutrient line and invest in a PH METER, and lastly, water on a schedule, not when you think they're dry, regardless if they are or not, it creates a rhythm the plant/roots recognize. Hope this helps.
 

Richard Drysift

Well-Known Member
Very simple to fix this just get a bag of worm castings and mix it in with some base soil in a tote bin or something. Add at least 1/3 worm castings and transplant to larger containers.
It’s true your mix is falling off and it is related to ph. Increasing microbial activity will put ph back into proper range for absorption. No need to check/adjust ph; just add active compost. Sprinkling some granular mycorrhizae in the hole at each transplant would also assist with absorption of nutrients.
Brewing up a worm tea would make it go to work even faster. Add some kelp meal and molasses and bubble it for 36+ hrs for the win.
 

Killaki

Well-Known Member
I’m currently growing 4 strains in my small tent before I put these babies outside. But 3 out of the 4 are having problems. I’m wondering what kind of deficiency or deficiencies they have & what I could do about fixing this. I’m using dry amendments & basic organic soil.
I came here to say the same things as stated above. Perhaps different tips to get there but basic theme is transplant to a bigger pot and resolve the pH/nutrient uptake issue.
 
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