Don’t know why leaves are stil drooping temp is at 78 with 50% humidity
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Most of the time droopy is from overwatering but other things can cause it. You might want to raise your net it's just going to be in your way down there and won't help hold up your buds.TENT 1 4x4 SF7000
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2x Thundersuck... og Jimmy... flo.... blue cheese
TENT 3 2X4 SF2000 + 2 113w blurples
3 gallon pots all autos
Weddingcake..2 red Gorilla girl..2 cinderella jack
All growing in living soil using Earth Dust
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I agree with Rwise she was recently transplanted? She's just droopy if you lost alot of soil off her during transplant and roots got messed with cause she's pretty big. But they are resilient and should perk up in few days.Smoke Ganja create Peace Respect Nature don't trash the Planet
Soil grower with coco/perlite mixed in
indoor/outdoor grower
1 36"x36"x66" tent- Viparspectra P2500
1 3x3x6 tent- used in late spring for seedlings both veggies & weed. I have 2 viparspectar 450r for that tent.
I use a t-5 & 54watt CFL for seedlings
Sometimes i use plastic sometimes i use fabric grow containers
Currently using fish/guano during veg growth & FF Grow Big 6-4-4 teens to bloom. Once i see pre-flower i switch to
Age Old Organics Bloom 5-10-5
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They will droop when the leaves are "sweating" (or at least transpiring) more water out of them than the roots are taking in. This can be from overheating, having too much air movement, under watering, or having damaged the roots a little when transplanting (I notice the title is soil transplant). Weirdly it can also be from overwatering, which I believe is because the overwatering damages the roots somehow. Basically think of your plant as a straw the leaves are taking water out of the top and the roots refill that water (and adds more as it grows). Anything that interupts the roots will drop the pressure in the plant and cause wilting. With that in mind it will almost certainly just fix itself (assuming it's damaged roots) over a few days but you could (and I don't know how others on here will think about this idea) treat it a little bit like a cutting. With cuttings you take some of the leaves away to reduce the transpiration through the leaves because the plant has no roots to start with. You could reduce the number of leaves and thereby reduce the required amount of water that the roots need to keep the straw filled. It's a tough call because it's likely to just fix itself (assuming it's the roots still), but if you were planning on defoliating shortly, now might be the time.
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