cannarado
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How they looking after napalmin' them?
Seriously? To quote someone else, Fuckin' ACE!!!! I was waiting to see you post about it again saying that it wasn't working, and that's just completely depressing.No trace of that shit today! Plants all are fully preying for the first time in a week or two, even with the damaged tops.
Another one for your bag of tricks. Gotta give mad props to T2U.Now just gotta clean the room and veg em up nice and pretty again. Heritage was the only thing that really took care of it systemically, everything else has been a bandaid for a wound that got too big. Glad to have saved my genetics, now I just gotta take steps to ensure this doesn't happen again and not leave my self open to the point where I become dependent on the systemics. Clean, clean, clean....tidy, tidy, tidy....no more spraying water from the hose to raise RH...
I agree as far as keeping plants healthy and their immune systems tip top. This is why this infected my hydro moms before anything else, as some of those moms were over a year old in the same F/D tray, getting fed who knows what in that course of time, LOL.
I have used aspirin and vitamin B in the past to help plants get over stress. Foliar is the best application. I think the mix we did was ~160 mg of aspirin per gallon. Rub off the coating or get unbuffered aspirin (hard to find), and then half a pill crushed up per gallon. 1 whole aspirin for a 2 gal pump sprayer.
I would also do some foliar feeds with Magic Green or Floralicious Plus to green them up a bit, but they look burned out on foliars in general right now, so I'll go easy on them for the next week or so...
Thanks again for all the help guys! Here is what eventually did the trick for me...
http://www.syngentaprofessionalproducts.com/prodrender/index.aspx?prodid=50
I know it says for lawns and turfs, but if you read into it, it also has recommend dosages for cucumbers, tomatoes, grapes, strawberries, peaches, apricots, etc. The only fruit it said that will cause problems being exposed to Heritage are apple trees. What is crazy is that it says for strawberries and tomatoes, you are allowed (depending on the state) to spray up until the day of harvest. That can't be right.
We, as cannabis farmers, are so concerned with systemics being used in veg and having residual in the harvested buds, usually 80+ days later. But the foods we eat are so packed full of toxins, pesticides, fungicides, herbicides, etc. its ridiculous. I mean, its legal to spray Imid on tomatoes SIX days before harvest...how is that legal?????
Chronic Monster said:whatcha think... any info you can share?
Thanks again for all the help guys! Here is what eventually did the trick for me...
http://www.syngentaprofessionalproducts.com/prodrender/index.aspx?prodid=50
try 200x magnification on one of those sick tips..you may see more than you thought
this is unfortunately from experience.
Rubbing alcohol worked pretty well in bloom on killing those suckers. Been checking my leaves under a scientific microscope, so I'm not fucking around anymore...
% and dilution rate plz?