asaph
Well-Known Member
i have 9 seedlings, two in soil in which i've grown very well before, and seven in coco. the two in soil are now showing leaf-tip discoloration, indicating possible nute-burn!
The seven in coco do not show burn, but other symptoms which are not in this discussion.
Background and details:
These are 9 days old (from hatching up in rockwool) Hindu Kush seedlings in a standard organic potting soil (with peat, coco, consolidated volcanic ash, "aerators" and "slow release fertilizers" (no indication here, most likely red worms and such). I also mixed some hydroton (expanded clay?) in it to keep better drainage. They are under 400w HPS lighting, and are receiving RO water (80ppm) at 6.5 pH with no additives (except some root juice before planting). Last watering was about 96 hours ago. Besides that, their conditions are identical to those in coco (which haven't show burn symptoms) and they have shown this symptom sometime between 2-12 hours ago.
Like i said, i've been growing with this soil for a couple of months now (bagseed) with no such symptoms (i've had yellowing leaves early at flowering but nothing during veg or seed).
What could be the case then?
The watering before last, which was when planting the cube into the soil, was with mineral water, about 400 ppm. Could this be why? It doesn't make any sense though. Why did this happen? Perhaps a sensitive strain?
and what do I do?
flush the soil thoroughly? I doubt if that would help me get rid of nutes that I didn't put there! or will it? should I try to decrease the soil ppm? to what point?
also: I have 3 seedlings I just put in this soil (with the rockwool cube) 48-60 hours ago. Do I still have time to remove them? or will it stress them much?
please I seriously need helpful advice right now.
You probably can't tell the color but can tell the color difference. it kinda looks like a burn.
A plant growing in the exact same soil (even the same bag) and also without the hydroton. The lesions are not nute burns - they are probably light burns caused by a humidifier blowing directly on the leaves :\
updated better light pics:
above: very small tip discoloration
better plant shot
The seven in coco do not show burn, but other symptoms which are not in this discussion.
Background and details:
These are 9 days old (from hatching up in rockwool) Hindu Kush seedlings in a standard organic potting soil (with peat, coco, consolidated volcanic ash, "aerators" and "slow release fertilizers" (no indication here, most likely red worms and such). I also mixed some hydroton (expanded clay?) in it to keep better drainage. They are under 400w HPS lighting, and are receiving RO water (80ppm) at 6.5 pH with no additives (except some root juice before planting). Last watering was about 96 hours ago. Besides that, their conditions are identical to those in coco (which haven't show burn symptoms) and they have shown this symptom sometime between 2-12 hours ago.
Like i said, i've been growing with this soil for a couple of months now (bagseed) with no such symptoms (i've had yellowing leaves early at flowering but nothing during veg or seed).
What could be the case then?
The watering before last, which was when planting the cube into the soil, was with mineral water, about 400 ppm. Could this be why? It doesn't make any sense though. Why did this happen? Perhaps a sensitive strain?
and what do I do?
flush the soil thoroughly? I doubt if that would help me get rid of nutes that I didn't put there! or will it? should I try to decrease the soil ppm? to what point?
also: I have 3 seedlings I just put in this soil (with the rockwool cube) 48-60 hours ago. Do I still have time to remove them? or will it stress them much?
please I seriously need helpful advice right now.
You probably can't tell the color but can tell the color difference. it kinda looks like a burn.
A plant growing in the exact same soil (even the same bag) and also without the hydroton. The lesions are not nute burns - they are probably light burns caused by a humidifier blowing directly on the leaves :\
updated better light pics:
above: very small tip discoloration
better plant shot