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Can someone help me diagnose this problem???

  • Thread starter Thread starter Bloomydaze
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Can someone help me diagnose this problem???

Bloomydaze 37 Replies 3,141 Views
Page 2 of 2 · Replies 21–38 of 38
If it works for you, continue your method. It’s because you’re consistent with your growing habits.
What’s important is the ph of the growing media, and testing to make sure it’s where plants grow at optimum.
Improper feeding and watering practices can move ph out of whack over time and needs to be stable.
To each their own, but pro growers monitor these numbers, especially when plants are symptomatic. OP, dropped photos with no info so who knows how they were abused.
Fair enuff - I am pretty consistent and when shit goes wonky ph and ec are the first thing cked - just haven’t had to in a minute
 
ph out of balance plant not getting what it needs
 
IMO you can’t diagnose anything by a picture with no info.

obviously there are some major issues is about the most accurate answer anyone can give you. There are a million reasons why a plant can look like that and none of them are good
 
Not checking pH is fine if you are in soil, using your tried and true soil mix, business as usual. But when something is wrong, no chemical test narrows it down as much as checking pH. If the pH of this media is high 6s to 8, the problem is likely too much calcium. pH above 8 there is likely a sodium problem. Soil too acidic can mean too much iron or aluminum.

Something is obviously wrong in the pic. Wrong happens. It's a good idea to be able to check pH, even as a soil grower.
 
Yeah prob posted a pic on a few forums and went with the answer he wanted to hear… pure speculation
Sorry, I work at the farm and get SUPER busy at times….It is a Tupor Soil/BioChar mix…Athena Pro Line…2.5 EC, 5.7 Ph…27 days Veg
 
they clearly need 25 more ml! if your hand watering a coco run be on top of it because once you lock em' out good luck running cleanse!
 
IF you do pour-through testing from the beginning you can monitor the normal soil range. Adding something to the soil without knowing the soil chemistry can be risky.
 
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