I tend to agree with BudzBuddha on the trellis, at this stage it's just a big net draped over them, not really opening them up or training growth breaking the atypical growth.Hey guys, I’ve always come to this issue and not sure how to fix. Using house and garden coco nutrients in canna coco. Day 14,
1ml/gal power si bloom
7ml cal mag
7ml part a
7ml part b
.5ml drip clean
Ph 5.8.
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75 and 55I used to run H&G in coco you do not need calmag. What are your temperatures and humidity? The plants honestly could be getting too much light. That will also cause leaves to shy away from lights and curve/curl downward.
I run those same lights over a pretty big area (roughly 5 ft x 18 ft) and achieve 500+ PPFD as far as 24" from the light.
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75 and 55
I’m running the lights at 60%
You shouldn’t let coco dry out to 50% ever.Has your issue been resolved since you made this post?? Unless I've missed it, I never seen your input EC and runoff EC? You could very well have salt buildup causing a lockout even if your feeding at 3/4 strength, 1/2 strength, etc. It still happens.
Honestly, I have seen similar issues in coco when the medium was staying too wet (think drenched). I realize you can't really over water in coco, but thats only if you have a completely full established root system. Trust me, try watering a plant (as an experiment) 3 times a day in coco that does not have an established root system and see for yourself. The key is, to water frequently but not over saturate the soil. At least let it dry out near 50% or wait till you have an established root system before you go overboard.
How are they doing now??
You shouldn’t let coco dry out to 50% ever.
You shouldn’t let coco dry out to 50% ever.
I agree. Same goes for rockwool and I assume every other medium.Keep in mind, I'm not saying you should ever let the coco dry out even near completely... "Dry back" would be a better choice of word.
I agree. Same goes for rockwool and I assume every other medium.
Coco holds sufficient oxygen even when fully saturated. Why would you need a dry back?
Thats what the science and research says... But from experience with trial and error I absolutely swear by drybacks until the root system is fully established. Yes you can still grow nice plants up until that point in coco keeping it fully saturated (before the root system is full) but personally I don't get the vigor and root expansion that I do with drybacks. You have to be careful though not to let it dry back too much obviously or your gonna have issues with salts.
You're on your third grow in coco, 3 grows isn’t much trial and error against actual science.
You're on your third grow in coco, 3 grows isn’t much trial and error against actual science.