Looks like a major problem

gOb13

Member
I don't what's going on with one of my ladies. I am running them under 8 t5s for flower to try it out. FFoF soil with fox farm nutes about once a week at 1000 ppm now that it's in flower. All of my other plants (6) look great this one seems to be having issues. Any help with the attached photos on how I may be able to save this one that would be great. I am not sure whats going on as its my first grow.
 

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Darkice91

Member
I’m new to this but from what I read a big thing on turning/ wilting leaves is extramarital humidity’s and under or over watering
 

Richard Drysift

Well-Known Member
The droop could be from either too much or too little watering; looks like from your pics that maybe they are just a little dry. If it's real hot in there that in and of itself could be the root cause of most of your problems. Twisted leaves or clawing is usually a sign you may be giving them a bit too much nitrogen; it's not quite "nute burn" yet but your plant is trying to tell you it doesn't need as much as you think it does. Some strains or even certain phenotypes within a strain prefer less nutes than others can tolerate. No need to flush or do anything drastic just water your plants as normal and cut down on your ppms by half when you feed again; go back up by a hundred if they start to get pale. Top dressing with a couple handfuls of worm castings every so often does wonders and helps fix a ton of ailments; get some if you can and your plants will thank you.
 

vostok

Well-Known Member
yeah the claw is excess (N)

but with the wilter I'd be looking for root rot

typical this time of year

sniff the pot base for a rotten sock odor

caused by a fungus and too much idle water

good luck
 

Huckster79

Well-Known Member
I cut down my nute issues a ton, to none basically in some time by switching to breathable pots, Coco coir, and weak nutes but constant watering- either as often as you can or automate it. In breathable pots the coco needs no dry cycle to keep root rot away. Look up the PPK (passive plant killer method) happiest damn roots I've ever seen- grow right out the sides of the fabric pots and no nute issues. I think a low concentration of nutes but continually available is far better than drought and then dousing em with high strength nutes...
 

Indacouch

Well-Known Member
I used Fox Farms soil and their trio of nutes for years. Grew some nice plants with it.

What are you feeding per gallon on each right now?
 

gOb13

Member
It's at about 1000 ppm +/- 100 using the trio plus it's my last week of beastie blooms im also using calmag. I was giving them suggested at first but the ppm was really high so I cut back a bit and they were thriving with about 1/2 to 3/4's the recommended and only nuted once a week. Also watering here in their as Norcal is seeing some heat right now. All of them look great except this one
I'm also seeing lower fan leaves withering to a crisp and yellowing prior to that.
 
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