That might be it, I was thinking I should have transplanted her already. I'm going to do it right away.how deep is the container? How old is she? Looks like she might need to be transplanted into something to allow her roots to develop bigger so she can eat more. Though, if you think it's big enough, you could try to slowly start increasing the nutes a little bit.
Usually when soil is dry and/or they show curl leaves.how often do you water it?
True..I didn't even look at how low his lighting was, just looked at the pic. Good catch midwest.Imo, your problem is your lighting. You have 30w of cfl...thats not going to cut it.You should have at least 2-4 27w (6500k) bulbs, and at least double that for flowering. 30w will not produce anything plain and simple. That would be the equivalent of you eating one apple a day lol, you'd survive but you'd you terribly weak. As for the watering, try every 3-4 days, make sure soil is dry 2-3 inch down. Hope this helps! Good luck.
So a 1000w light is good for 100 square feet (10' x 10') but a 600w is only right for 36 square feet (6' x 6') ... or, a 1000w does as good a job as 3 x 600w lights, something not quite right with your assumption and not quite right to be advising grow room design based on your odd coverage calculations.My first thought was it was root bound. I think the general "accepted" rule for lighting is 100w dedicated to each plant. Or, if you gave hps or mh in your grow area you can assume that 400w will cover a 4x4 foot area, a 600w will do 6x6, and you guessed it 1000w will do 10x10 foot.just something to keep in mind when you are designing your area. Good luck buddy, let us know if she improves.
That 10x10 should have been 8x8 for hid and 7x7 for hps..my bad I'm high as fuck. Here is the link I use for every question I have about lights and ballasts.So a 1000w light is good for 100 square feet (10' x 10') but a 600w is only right for 36 square feet (6' x 6') ... or, a 1000w does as good a job as 3 x 600w lights, something not quite right with your assumption and not quite right to be advising grow room design based on your odd coverage calculations.