Leaves have spots

Nik-E

Active Member
Growing indoor
Medium:soil
Temp./Humid. : 84 °f , 56 %
Plants is approx. 7 to 8 weeks from sprout.
I transplanted my plant into a 5 gallon cloth pot a few days ago, I am using mother earth, groundswell soil. The tips of some of my leaves are turning yellow/ white ...
I looked at the deficiency charts and can't figure it out? Any help would be greatly appreciated, im definitely new to this.
 

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Nik-E

Active Member
Is the problem at the bottom or top of the plant?
Are leaves yellowing?

When taking pictures, take them under natural light so we can see the color of the plant.
Also, try to take a picture of the whole plant.
It is more toward the top an mid section.
Sorry, I tried to pull my plant out and take it under the light. I'll take a few more in a bit.
 

Boreal Curing

Well-Known Member
It is more toward the top an mid section.
Sorry, I tried to pull my plant out and take it under the light. I'll take a few more in a bit.
From what I can see, I'm 99% sure it's a calcium deficiency. You can rescue it with a cal-mag foliar spray (follow the directions), and add it to your feeding regiment.
 

Nik-E

Active Member
Yeah I feed them Calmag, would I use that cal mag for the spray or is there a separate cal mag foliage spray?
 

Boreal Curing

Well-Known Member
Exact same stuff. You should only have to spray it once. It's best to do it at lights out and make sure you spray the underside of the leaves. By spray, I don't mean drown. lol.

Since Calcium is an immobile nutrient, your plant can't get/move it from another part of the plant, so the foliar spray is an emergency measure to get it where it needs to be on the plant to stop the deficiency. Note that you can't fix a damaged leaf. You can only stop it from getting worse.

Again, make sure you follow the direction on the label.

Good luck.
 

Nik-E

Active Member
Exact same stuff. You should only have to spray it once. It's best to do it at lights out and make sure you spray the underside of the leaves. By spray, I don't mean drown. lol.

Since Calcium is an immobile nutrient, your plant can't get/move it from another part of the plant, so the foliar spray is an emergency measure to get it where it needs to be on the plant to stop the deficiency. Note that you can't fix a damaged leaf. You can only stop it from getting worse.

Again, make sure you follow the direction on the label.

Good luck.
Thank you very much for the help, I greatly appreciate it.
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
Ok, yeah I been trying to bring it down...I heard a few things about lemon water, does that help?
What is your water source? Tap water straight from the tap is generally better than RO, distilled or filtered. Ph adjustments are only for high or low water PH. Or nutrient uptake tweeking. Not likely to help with cal/mag issues.
 

Nik-E

Active Member
What is your water source? Tap water straight from the tap is generally better than RO, distilled or filtered. Ph adjustments are only for high or low water PH. Or nutrient uptake tweeking. Not likely to help with cal/mag issues.
Tap water, sorry so late I had some family stuff going on.
 
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