I inherited a damaged lady (cougar) and it needs a man who knows how to satisfy her

BonesBuds

Active Member
Meet durban poision (non auto). She lived in a hostile environment.
She
  1. Grew up in a small tent with 9 other females, but a mix of species
  2. Is showing signs of malnourishment, clearly showing deficiencies in multiple areas
  3. Showing fan leaves near the top that are clenching into a fist
  4. Has been topped a few times
  5. She is a cougar! Already three + months old, all in veg because she was in her space with autos
  6. She has been receiving 18-6 hours of light her whole life (well over 3 months)
  7. She has just received her first dose of 12-12 in hope that new growth will be healthy
  8. She has been receiving treatments of guano and FF 6-4-4 nutes
Photos attached for your review. What will save this cougar and make her the MILF she is fully capable of becoming?
 

BonesBuds

Active Member
Meet durban poision (non auto). She lived in a hostile environment.
She
  1. Grew up in a small tent with 9 other females, but a mix of species
  2. Is showing signs of malnourishment, clearly showing deficiencies in multiple areas
  3. Showing fan leaves near the top that are clenching into a fist
  4. Has been topped a few times
  5. She is a cougar! Already three + months old, all in veg because she was in her space with autos
  6. She has been receiving 18-6 hours of light her whole life (well over 3 months)
  7. She has just received her first dose of 12-12 in hope that new growth will be healthy
  8. She has been receiving treatments of guano and FF 6-4-4 nutes
Photos attached for your review. What will save this cougar and make her the MILF she is fully capable of becoming?
 

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waterproof808

Well-Known Member
Looks like you have a broad mite infestation plus powdery mildew.

This downward leaf curl with taco'd edges is a symptom of broad mites. Whereas russet mites also get taco'd edges but the leaves dont curl downward like that
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First of this post made me laugh multiple times so thank you everyone for that!

As far as the cougar is concerned, you're efforts would be best focused on getting another one going. She's been road hard and put away wet at the vary least.
 

BonesBuds

Active Member
Can you ride the plant of mite infestation by drying her out?
Yooo is that a bud?
Good catch... there is another plant behind her, I see now that my pic didn't really help because the bud belongs to a different plant right behind my cougar.
 
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