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What’s the cause of drooping leaves?

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What’s the cause of drooping leaves?

Doublekush 7 Replies 1,028 Views
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Doublekush

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The grow seems the be going well, but were on week 2 of flowering and this gelato plants leaves keep curling down

lighting is optimum (not too high)

Past two weeks feeding:
21f 1.5l 2 shogun 1 cal mag

22f 12/

23f…..

24f….



Wk7 wk1 flw

25f 1.5L 1 bio

26f….

27f…..

28f……

1m…..

2m 1.5L 1 shogun 3 bgbd

3m….



Wk8 wk2 flw

4m……

5m 1.5L 1 cal mag 1bio

6m….



Any advice or things you notice please let me know :)
 

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I'd call that clawing, not drooping. Typically associated with excess nitrogen. The dark green leaves are another indication.
This could well be a possibility!

Will this affect my yield or potency?

Should I keep adding small amounts of nitrogen and callas during flowing or just p and k?

Appreciate it as always brother
 
This could well be a possibility!

Will this affect my yield or potency?

Should I keep adding small amounts of nitrogen and callas during flowing or just p and k?

Appreciate it as always brother
Every time we hurt our plants, it decreases yield and quality. If that were mine, I'd start by taking a runoff ppm/EC reading to try to get an idea of how much salt is in the pots.
 
Every time we hurt our plants, it decreases yield and quality. If that were mine, I'd start by taking a runoff ppm/EC reading to try to get an idea of how much salt is in the pots.
Cool I’ll look into that on my next feed,

Final question, does clawing mean the plant is hurt? Or can it be dealing with/adjusting to it’s environment

Thanks
 
Cool I’ll look into that on my next feed,

Final question, does clawing mean the plant is hurt? Or can it be dealing with/adjusting to it’s environment

Thanks
Everything a plant does is dealing with/adjusting to/suffering from/benefiting from its inputs, whether that's watering, feeding, light, or environment. I'm not a scientist, but in my own garden, I want my fan leaves to be flat, level, and vibrant green. When I see anything else, I start thinking about which inputs I have wrong. The only environmental cause I've heard of for clawing is wind burn. I haven't seen that in my own grows, but I've seen it mentioned as a possibility. When I see clawing and dark green color on the same plant, nitrogen toxicity is the first thing I think of.
 
Everything a plant does is dealing with/adjusting to/suffering from/benefiting from its inputs, whether that's watering, feeding, light, or environment. I'm not a scientist, but in my own garden, I want my fan leaves to be flat, level, and vibrant green. When I see anything else, I start thinking about which inputs I have wrong. The only environmental cause I've heard of for clawing is wind burn. I haven't seen that in my own grows, but I've seen it mentioned as a possibility. When I see clawing and dark green color on the same plant, nitrogen toxicity is the first thing I think of.
Okay man, the rest of them are loooking vibrant and loving life just that ones a bit upset.

I’ll check the ppm and go from there
 
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