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Need help with my autoflower please!

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Need help with my autoflower please!

budrow 8 Replies 1,146 Views
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budrow

budrow

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Hi, I have been growing an autoflower (blackberry kush by Dutch passion) in a 2x2 with a viparspectra p1000 light. I have been in flower for a little over a month. I'm noticing a bunch of the leaves are turning brown/yellow and are dying. I have been watering only when the topsoil is dry about a half inch down with tap water with a PH of 6.5 and have been using superthrive bloom 3-12-6 nutrients and adding 10ml of Foxfarm tiger bloom with the superthrive every other watering. The plant is also in a 5 gallon fabric pot. I just don't know if I'm adding too many nutrients or what? Just don't know what could be causing the leaves to do this, Thank you!
 

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Leaves will tend to fade toward the end of the plant's life, but there's evidence of over-feeding (clawing, tip burn progressing down the leaf edges) and over-watering (leaf thickness and texture). Tough to say much more without knowing what media you're running, but the "finger in the topsoil" test isn't a great way to time waterings. Pot weight is much better.
 
I'm thinking the same as @ArtfulCodger on all counts.

I use several methods, including the finger in the soil method. If a finger in the soil is your best option, then I suggest going a little deeper--about 1 to 2 inches. Also, avoid watering close to the stem at that plant's age.
 
So... What to do? I suggest letting the plant use the excess nutrients. To do so, stop feeding for a week or two and use plain water. I also don't think you need both of the products you're using. I'm not familiar with Superthrive Bloom 3-12-6, but those proportions would be okay for flowering.

Those leaves won't recover and may get worse. They can be cut off if they're dead. I would leave them on if they're still mostly green so they can help the plant.
 
Leaves will tend to fade toward the end of the plant's life, but there's evidence of over-feeding (clawing, tip burn progressing down the leaf edges) and over-watering (leaf thickness and texture). Tough to say much more without knowing what media you're running, but the "finger in the topsoil" test isn't a great way to time waterings. Pot weight is much better.
Thanks! I'm using foxfarm ocean forest soil.
 
Usually every 2-3 days
When I've run Ocean Forest, I've had good results watering slowly to about 10% runoff, and then drying back until the pots are very light. How long that will take depends on the relationship between the plant size and the pot size. I suspect you've been watering too frequently. If you want to know for sure, you could let the plant dry back until you see straight-down droop in the lowers. Water immediately when you see that. The next watering should come 1-2 days sooner than your "test" dryback.
 
When I've run Ocean Forest, I've had good results watering slowly to about 10% runoff, and then drying back until the pots are very light. How long that will take depends on the relationship between the plant size and the pot size. I suspect you've been watering too frequently. If you want to know for sure, you could let the plant dry back until you see straight-down droop in the lowers. Water immediately when you see that. The next watering should come 1-2 days sooner than your "test" dryback.
Okay I will try that and get back with you. Thanks a lot for the help!
 
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