Log In Register

Can somebody help me identify the issue

  • Thread starter Thread starter danman68
  • Start date Start date
  • Tagged users Tagged users None

Can somebody help me identify the issue

danman68 9 Replies 592 Views
Page 1 of 1 · Replies 1–10 of 10
1
D

danman68

Posts
6
Reactions
1
Joined
Aug 8, 2025
Points
3
Hi this nutrient burn or deficiency thanks
 

Attachments

  • can-somebody-help-me-identify-the-issue.jpg
    can-somebody-help-me-identify-the-issue.jpg
    71.5 KB · Views: 3
My first guess would be nute burn. How much and how often are you feeding? What media are you growing in?
 
Hi I'm growing in soil and I'm feeding them with maxigro 300 ppm 1 time a day thanks very much.
The photo is of the new growth
 

Attachments

  • 17546832304596276915775259522589.jpg
    17546832304596276915775259522589.jpg
    226.3 KB · Views: 4
I have never grown in soil before I'm used to Rockwool and nft I'm only using 4ร—4 pots and I'm planning on putting them on an nft table soon.is the best cause of action to flush them thanks again
 
The first thing I'd do is check the ppms/EC of your runoff to make sure the random guy on the internet (me) is right about the over-feeding. Assuming he is, then I'd flush it down to below 1,000 ppms/2 EC. If you over-do it on the flush, feed back up to that level or a little higher. In amended soils like Happy Frog or Ocean Forest, I manage around that level. When my runoff falls below that number, I either feed (about 600 ppms) or transplant into fresh amended soil.
 
So what is the problem ๐Ÿค” thanks
In the past, it's been over-fed. In your most recent pic, it looks like the lower growth is the most burned, and the newer growth is the least burned. I'd back off your feeding a bit going forward. It might be as simple as the plant is now big enough to tolerate how much you're feeding. But I'd keep an eye out and adjust accordingly.
 
Page 1 of 1 · Replies 1–10 of 10
1
Back
Top Bottom