What the shit is going on?!

bigdog123

Active Member
My leafs are droopy. They are on day three of veg. They looked just fine before today. They are on a flood and drain system. In cocoa pots. Soil Fiber mix. I've also noticed that some of the leafs have what look like water drops on the leafs. The humidity hasnt got over 60% so I don't know if this is related to the droopy leafs.
 

james leonard

Active Member
my experience which is little...i found droopy leaves means they need water.. well thats how mine act anyways about 2hrs after i add h2O they are perky again... just my 2cents
 

suTraGrow

Well-Known Member
my experience which is little...i found droopy leaves means they need water.. well thats how mine act anyways about 2hrs after i add h2O they are perky again... just my 2cents
They could also be over watered or a problem with the root system. Post pics
 

smokebros

Well-Known Member
your overwatering them, keep the temps below 85, theyll be fine in 3-5 days. focus on new growth, make sure new growth looks goog. gl bro
 

suTraGrow

Well-Known Member
Definitely over watered with 60% or close to humidity your soil wont be drying out as fast. Add extra or two days in between your watering schedule and you should be fine from here on out.
 

Starshock

Member
WAY too much water, if you have large droplets beading up on fan leaves you should use a lot less h20, remember weed isnt from the rainforest its from the mountains of Asia. Better drainage (add 10% sand or pearlite to your soil mix) and increased air flow will help, also you could diagnose that overwatering is definitely the problem by not watering one plant, watering one half as much, and continuing your watering method on a third. Give it a week, find out exactly how much water your ladies like, and keep up the good work ;).
 

Ganja viewer

Well-Known Member
Any idea where the water drops on the leafs came from?

Leaves perspiring (guttation possibly)

Guttation is the appearance of drops of water on the leaves of some vascular plants, such as grasses.
On some nights when atmospheric conditions are not conducive to transpiration (humid and windless), and when there is a high soil moisture, guttation occurs to maintain the flow of water and nutrients through the plant. In that event, the water will exude through special leaf tip cells, hydathodes in the leaves, forming drops of water. Root pressure provides the impetus for this flow, rather than transpiration pull.
Guttation may contain minerals, such as calcium, in solution. On drying, this leaves a white crust on the leaf surface.
Guttation is not to be confused with dew, which condenses from the atmosphere onto the plant surface.

How long did you have plants in seedling stage? They look awfully big for 3 days of vegging!
 
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