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New leafs looks like it has burned holes
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Is it happening mainly to leaves that aren't getting much light?
Another thought: is happening mainly to leaves that are getting direct wind from the fan?
Have you noticed anything unusual with watering like they're drinking less than normal (a possible sign of root problems)?
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Well I guess there under my main top but I needed up moving the rest of my other branches alil more out of the way so they can get light but it doesn't seem to do anything except get the mid under area to reach the light.
I do have a oscillating fan in my grow tent.
I've noticed that my problem plant does drink a lot more water then the others. So idk if that plant is rootbound but still my other plants are about the same size
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If it's drinking a lot, have you considered transplanting to a bigger container? Especially if it's been in the same container its whole life it could be root bound. If the roots are wrapped all around the sides it can cause deficiencies and droopiness. Sometimes one plant grows bigger roots than the others. Just a possible idea!
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I have been thinking about it but I don't have a strong enough of a light for how big the plants will end up to be even though the light is still probably not enough light for all my plants.
I was going to start to flower them by the next time I water them. I kinda hope this fixes the nitrogin toxicity from that plant.
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You mention that your temps get down to 65. Is it possible to raise that low temperature by 3-5 degrees?completed 7 grows
what I have learned so far:
environment maters more than nutrients
at least a dab of nutrients in every watering
effective flushing before harvest is critical to quality
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i also think it's the fan. looks like my leaves when i had the fan too close (it was oscillating). moved fan back, problem went away.
that would also explain why that plant in particular is drinking more because if it were the high level of fan activity then that would cause the plant to overtranspire, thus getting thirsty faster/drinking more."i try to play the ball not the opponent."--Roger Federer
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These are what my leaves look like from fan damage. I dont know if i recall reading anything about how damage is caused, but because wind or airflow increases transpiration, then it could cause a higher amount of water loss in concentrated spots that quite literally cause dehydration and chlorosis.3 PhotosWritten Articles:
Light Metric Systems
Using Light Efficiently
The Light Cycle Debate
Environment Conditions
Grow Light Technologies
How To Compare Grow Lights
To Defoliate Or Not To Defoliate
Having A Light Source Too Close
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