dogenzengi is almost there, but its later in flower, that yellowing doesnt make me worry. You dont want to see to much discoloration this early in the growth cycle. yellow leaves near the bottum first sign of N def. what is your nutrient/feeding lineup? my guess is she wants a bit of N. Especially because its all four of your plants.
you should pick up the big bloom and a bag of fruit and flower....some castings...... gravy train.........I'm using tiger bloom. My girls are in week 2 of flower. I water my 3 gallons pots every 3 days and altering feedings every other water
yes !! if you want fox farm nutes run big bloom whole cycle. has ton of mirco nutes and balances ph. which got me thinking what are you run off ph levels. tiger bloom and foxfarm nues in general are heavily chelated and build up salts over time. can lower ph to point where locks out key nutrients. your could give it as much nutirnets as you want and it would never get any of it.you should pick up the big bloom and a bag of fruit and flower....some castings...... gravy train.........
Never knew this. i just thought it caused extra stress to take off damaged leaves. thanks for the new info squidbilly!One more thing-once leaves are damaged by a deficiency they will not recover, and they often become crispy and die. DON'T pluck them off until they definitely dead- not becaue plucking leaves is bad for the plant, but if your plants are N deficient, and N is a mobil element, your plants are able to take it from one part of the plant and use it where it is needed. If you pluck the yellowing leaves too early, your plant will take it from another leaf, so if you start plucking them because they are ugly, you will make the problem spread much quicker.
Taking off leaves will cause some stress, but in my experience it's minimal-if you have a healthy plant removing up to a 1/3 of it's leaves will have little noticable impact on overall growth. In fact, I am ALWAYS removing leaves during veg and flower, both to prevent crowding and shading and to keep nice air flow through my canopy. When your experiencing an N deficiency, of any other mobile element, it's advisable NOT to remove those leaves until you definitely have the deficiency corrected, otherwise your plant will take the available nitrogen from a different leaf, making the problem 'spread' much quicker. I've made this mistake before and it seams like for every yellow leaf you remove, they would be 2 yellow leaves the next day, lol! It's taking nitrogen from those leaves, so it you remove them too soon, and you haven't corrected the deficiency, it will take it from another leaf.Never knew this. i just thought it caused extra stress to take off damaged leaves. thanks for the new info squidbilly!
I wouldn't go to crazy with increasing N. Just hit it a few times with some 'veg' nutes and you should be right back on track. Once your plants are done stretching, you need very little N and your bloom nutes should be fine. Sometimes lower leaves that are constantly in the shade will yellow regaurdless of what you do. If they aren't getting enough sunlight they become a burden on the plant to keep alive-they require energy to stay alive, and if they aren't getting a lot of light they become more of an energy drain than an energy source. These lower leaves are often refered to as 'water leaves' and the plant keeps them around as water and nutrient reserves. When the plant has more than enough leaves to complete photosynthesis and protect against natural deficiencies and draught, it sometimes start to shed these lower 'un-needed' leaves naturally.
This is also a reason why complete defoliation is risky, more than detremental to bud size and development- if you remove all or way too many of your leaves, you'll have no 'buffer' in case of draught(like forgetting to water one night) or deficiencies. Leaves aren't just for photosythesis, they are also energy stores/reserves for your plant. If they need something your not giving them, they will try to get it themselves If you've got a N deficiency and you pluck the yellowing leaves, it will get it from another one.
this is so true. its hard not to pluck them but that is what happens if you doOne more thing-once leaves are damaged by a deficiency they will not recover, and they often become crispy and die. DON'T pluck them off until they definitely dead- not becaue plucking leaves is bad for the plant, but if your plants are N deficient, and N is a mobil element, your plants are able to take it from one part of the plant and use it where it is needed. If you pluck the yellowing leaves too early, your plant will take it from another leaf, so if you start plucking them because they are ugly, you will make the problem spread much quicker.
LOL, I didn't realize this for quite some timethis is so true. its hard not to pluck them but that is what happens if you do