Well, I tranplanted into bigger pots, lowered the light, and buried the stems.....

agkil12

Member
and the leaves are all yellow as hell now.

Any ideas? Or is it just a little shock? The transplant was about 5 days ago.
 

agkil12

Member
What type of soil did you use?
Are you giving nutes?
What is the ph of water?
potting soil composed of hardwood fines, pine fines, sand, and perlite.

Nutes I am using is a 24-8-16 mix

PH level is 7.

I can't figure out why they are looking bad now. Maybe it was the transplant, I don't know.
 

Gippy666

Well-Known Member
Could just be transplant shock,how long ago did you transplant them???Or the new soil might be deficient in nitrogen
 

GoldenGanja13

Well-Known Member
potting soil composed of hardwood fines, pine fines, sand, and perlite.

Nutes I am using is a 24-8-16 mix

PH level is 7.

I can't figure out why they are looking bad now. Maybe it was the transplant, I don't know.
Soil is yuck.

Nutes are way off 24 nitrogen? in veg I use 6-4-4 and in bloom 2-8-4

Ph level is fine at 7. 6.5 is best for soil

Good luck. Happy grows
 

agkil12

Member
Soil is yuck.

Nutes are way off 24 nitrogen? in veg I use 6-4-4 and in bloom 2-8-4

Ph level is fine at 7. 6.5 is best for soil

Good luck. Happy grows
It was about a week ago that I transplanted them. So they may be too high in N, making them yellow?
I put extra perlite in the soil. They are in 3.5 gallon pots. Should my watering schedule be about one gallon per pot per week?

And should the 6-4-4 be used every time when watering?
 

robert 14617

Well-Known Member
mine are in three gallon pots i use 1to 1 1/2 quarts max per week....the nutes should not be at full strength yet and only feed every other watering
 

Melangwanja

Active Member
If you intend on having them flower right away, highly decrease your nitrogen levels in your fertilizer.

Go more for a phosphorus-rich one, since that's what's best for the flowering.

Just be carefull when you repot and so on. If you intend on having your plant flower right away, wait at least 1 - 2 weeks after repotting to switch light cycles.

Plants need their energy to get over the stress of changing pots.
 

agkil12

Member
its all going to depend on the make up of everyones soil i have more pete in mine it holds water longer

I'm basically trying to "save" these now. They were stretched to no end because I had too many plants to start with.

After growing for 45 days, they should be much bigger than they are, but just aren't taking off. I now only have 4 under a 400 W HPS, so I don't understand why they are continuing to "stretch" and not branch out.

Should I just use straight water for a while? I think they are "burned" from the nutes.

I don't think they are "un-saveable" at this point, but could be reaching that level if I don't do something soon.
 

GoldenGanja13

Well-Known Member
Best Avatar yet! Man I was way staring trying to figure out what the hell was it and how many? (time to but the bong bongsmiliedown).
 
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