LoveGrowingIt
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I've never heard of not watering till it runs off. It's bad advice. Water slowly so the soil can absorb the water. Do it till there's water dripping out the bottom of the pot. Then don't water again till the soil is dry. To know when to water again, I use a soil moisture meter, but there are other methods. Lifting the pot to get a sense of its weight when wet and dry is easiest. The plant's leaves will also indicate when it needs water.So here's my conundrum. I've been told and read that in an organic soil, you don't need to water to runoff because we don't use salt based nutrition. And we know what happens when salt builds up in the soil, lockout. So not using bottled nutrition I'm baffled as to why I'm going through a lock out at the moment.
Are you sure it's lockout? What are you using for nutrients? (Sorry, I haven't been following your thread.) I think the necrosis of the leaf tips might be a potassium deficiency.
When growing organically, the pH of the soil usually isn't a concern. I haven't checked mine in years. It only matters when using synthetic nutrients. Organic growing means the microorganisms feed the plant and we feed them. Have you added any products that have mycorrhizae?
Do you know what's causing the white spots on the leaves? I just got hit with spider mites, so I'm seeing them everywhere I look. Those spots resemble spider mite damage. The best way I know of to find out if you have them is to cut off a leaf with the spots and then look at the underside with a magnifier. A jeweler's loupe makes the mites, eggs and webbing easy to see.
Spider mites like hot and dry conditions. If you have them, keeping the climate cool and moist will slow their progress. It won't get rid of them, though.Quick note, I did turn the humidifier off couple days ago, just turned it back on, see if we can slow this down with that.