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    HELP! Help!

    Somebody knows what is happening?
    2xCOB led 55w, 85cm from the plant.
    Grown in hummus+lightmix, no nutes, only 6.2 Walter.
    Attached Files

    #2
    Try various pH levels. If you water at 6.2 once, do the next one at 6.8 or 6.9, then 6.4 then 6.7. Different nutrients are absorbed at different pH levels.

    Comment


    • Indoor55
      Indoor55 commented
      Editing a comment
      I have 4 plants of this strain and all of them are great except this one, so i didn't think about nutrient lack.
      I will follow your advice, thank you!
      If somebody has seen this before please help. Good vibes.

    #3
    Is it possible those lower leaves were laying on the soil for a while? The rest of the plant looks good.

    Comment


    • Indoor55
      Indoor55 commented
      Editing a comment
      No, It didn't touch the ground so idk... And the same brown spots are starting to appear in other leaves.

    #4
    Looks like It wants some cal mag or phosphorus maybe ..
    Are you over watering the plant maybe ?
    Just because people are over 50 doesn’t mean they know everything.
    You can teach a old dog new tricks - But it will still think the old ways are the “best” lol

    Comment


    • Indoor55
      Indoor55 commented
      Editing a comment
      No bro i don't think it's overwatering because i always make sure the soil it's dry enough to water again, and this one has only recieved 2x 250ml shots

    #5
    Hummus? light mix? Maybe your soil has added nutrients (some do). Try flushing the pot a couple of times with plain properly PH'd water (6.5 for soil) then let them dry out 3-4 days depending on how warm your room temp is.
    Humus has a negative charge which means that many of the nutrients plants require stick to humus, including ammonium (source of nitrogen), calcium, magnesium and phosphorous to name a few. The humus sponge holds onto these nutrients and prevents rain from washing them away. When a plant root comes in contact with it, the plant root is able to remove the nutrients from the humus sponge. The process is a bit more complicated than this, but you can think of humus as being a slow release source of fertilizer for your plants.
    I hope there is an afterlife...there are a lot of friends and family I'd like to see again, one day.

    Comment


      #6
      So interesting! I did know that It is a slow release source of nutes, but the whole process is amazing. Thank you for your help, i hope that she will be fine.

      Comment

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