Root rot- when to start nutes again?

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
I think that's more then staining. And your deeper in trouble then I would want to rely on bennies. I'd go with the peroxide (in my case it always cleared it up within like two hours like magic) then reintroduce your hydroguard. To really be able to treat deficiencys you gotta get the roots under control.
 

FeelinSpacey

Well-Known Member
It's clearing up. The h2o2 would have probably sped up the process but there isn't any smell and the temps are around 66 in the reservoir. I see new growth in the roots as well as the plant. I'll see how it goes over the next few days.
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
Alright cool. Temperature is key for two reasons. Warmer and the bacteria thrive, and the water loses its ability to absorb oxygen.
 

rkymtnman

Well-Known Member
I guess the gimmick I'm trying and falling for since it was included in my LED setup and that's some added UVB tubes.
make sure you turn them off when working near the light. uv will fuck up your skin and eyes.

and a suggestion instead of bennies: chlorine. it keeps your res sterile, no rot and it's actually a nutrient used by the plant. even if you have a chiller, still use it.
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
make sure you turn them off when working near the light. uv will fuck up your skin and eyes.

and a suggestion instead of bennies: chlorine. it keeps your res sterile, no rot and it's actually a nutrient used by the plant. even if you have a chiller, still use it.
That's a good thought I wasn't really considering....probably not good for the skin. And yea chlorine is seeming to become more and more popular.
 

FeelinSpacey

Well-Known Member
Still seeing new growth in roots and plant. Added additional bennies and nutes so I'm seeing less calcium def as well. Hopefully by early next week I'll have a nice healthy root ball
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
Adding more stones I don't know will be effective with that pump. I'll have to see what mine is rated for, I wanna say 1195gph. Seems like people have issues with those types of air pumps often.
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
One issue I ran into when running extra stones was it raised my bucket temps and was actually counterproductive. The increase in temperature limited the amount of oxygen the water could hold even though it was getting twice as much oxygen
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
Yea 6watts for air pump isn't very much. Mine is 40watts as a comparison for 2 plants. Not saying you won't get by, but sounds like that may be a weak link in your setup.
 

FennarioMike

Well-Known Member
Yea 6watts for air pump isn't very much. Mine is 40watts as a comparison for 2 plants. Not saying you won't get by, but sounds like that may be a weak link in your setup.
Agreed - get a bigger pump and more air in there.

I have both DWC and RDWC and in the DWC I just use Hydroguard, in the RDWC I use UC Roots (hypochlorous acid) and a chiller.
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
It's going to be a lot more noisy and put out a lot more heat but will most likely last a lot longer and also give the air your roots need to breath. That pump may get you by for a while but if you have a bucket full of roots it probably won't cut it.
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
Agreed - get a bigger pump and more air in there.

I have both DWC and RDWC and in the DWC I just use Hydroguard, in the RDWC I use UC Roots (hypochlorous acid) and a chiller.
Yea it's looking like I'm gonna have to install my chiller mid flower..... I'm getting some nasty ph swings as I can't keep bucket temps in control. And the roots look relatively fine.....
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
^ as advice for down the road to OP. Me setup was perfectly fine but now this late in the grow with more heat from lights during flower and less actual water in the buckets I'm getting too much fluctuation. So all can be well early on in your veg proccess and you fall on your face when it matters and you start flowering.
 
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