GNick55
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this is nice to have also.,
You’re probably right. The septoria is a fungus and has a little spore in the center and it would be more uniform across the leaf. Where as your burn is concentrated on the tips and edges which isn’t indicative of bugs or disease.Hard to imagine it’s a problem of excess nutrients, I only use dry amendments so it’s slow release, then I’ll top dress if necessary. Starting to think I have been overwatering though trying to kill these bugs.
Some of the damage is concentrated on the tips and edges but some of the leaves are burnt across the leaf like this, definitely thinking either overwatering or calcium deficiency at this point. Hard to imagine getting infected by a fungus when my humidity is generally 30-35%.You’re probably right. The septoria is a fungus and has a little spore in the center and it would be more uniform across the leaf. Where as your burn is concentrated on the tips and edges which isn’t indicative of bugs or disease.
leaf septoria is generally from overwatering.Some of the damage is concentrated on the tips and edges but some of the leaves are burnt across the leaf like this, definitely thinking either overwatering or calcium deficiency at this point. Hard to imagine getting infected by a fungus when my humidity is generally 30-35%.
I don’t feed the plants anything directly through the water, only dry amendments. When I switch to flower I’ll top dress the soil with 75% 2-8-4 and 25% 4-4-4 along with bat guano.leaf septoria is generally from overwatering.
pest can also carry diseases.
what are you feeding the plants and how much?
I was also thinking about your lighting? How many watts you hitting it at? Could be too much light as well? Just a thought …I’m thinking about letting my soil dry out a day longer than usual and then watering as normal with calmag, if I see a reduction in the leaf browning I’ll assume it was either overwatering calcium deficiency or both.
I have a 2000 watt LED with 360 watts of actual power draw inside of a 4x2, it’s 18 inches from the top of the plants. I was thinking the same thing but the fact that some of the shaded leaves are affected as well tells me it’s not.I was also thinking about your lighting? How many watts you hitting it at? Could be too much light as well? Just a thought …
Could be sprayed plants with too much peroxide and 18” of intense lighting….? Just a thought. Can you dial down the light? Dial down nutes, watering and lighting, see where that ends up leaves look really dark but could be the purple lighting.I have a 2000 watt LED with 360 watts of actual power draw inside of a 4x2, it’s 18 inches from the top of the plants. I was thinking the same thing but the fact that some of the shaded leaves are affected as well tells me it’s not.
Ive never heard of not being able smoke it. The zero tol will kill the spores. It's like strong h202 not exactly but your going to want to blast your entire grow space after harvest. Clean everything w a fine tooth comb ya know? It is OMRI listed not exactly cheap but great to have on hand.Looks like it. Can you still smoke it after the fungi spores are pretty much everywhere from what I’ve read? It treatable but is it worth it? Is it a quick fix? The spores Sound invasive, even on humans and clothes and everything.
I’ve had thrips so many times I couldn’t tell you how many. One more time, that is not thrip damage. They feed on the bottom sides of the leaves, really easy to see them. Usually clearish/green color. Like I said I’d your bug and good luck I think your going to need it.thrips are born inside of leaves, crawl out of them, feed on them, crawl into the soil where they pupate, then come out of the soil as an adult. You can find thrips on any part of your plant and in the soil, they’re some annoying ass bugs. And I didn’t burn my leaves, they starting showing that appearance and slowly spread like a virus growing more and more, and now at this point I can’t find a single bug no matter how hard I try but the leaf damage continues to progress.