Diagnose thease please

f1bud

Active Member
if u check out the leaf deficency chart ur answer shud b there, but it looks simply like lack of nitrogen, hence the leaf loosing its colour n goin yellow to brown to crispy, i am new to the game but have similar problem to u , and my research pointed to lack of feed especialy nitrogen as this is the key ingredient in keeping ur plant green, probly the hot weather did not help but still good lookin plant 2 me m8
 
i started giving them the 5-1-1 about 2 and a half weeks ago you think it would burn through thouse nutrients that fast?
 

watchhowIdoit

New Member
still looks like the same potassium deficiency from your other thread. you are growing outdoors in mineralized soil. The FE is just not going to cut it....
 

watchhowIdoit

New Member
Potassium (K)

Potassium is involved in maintaining the water status of the plant and the tugor pressure of it's cells and the opening and closing of the stomata. Potassium is required in the accumulation and translocation of carbohydrates. Lack of potassium will reduce yield and quality.
Potassium deficiency (K).
Older leaves are initially chlorotic but soon develop dark necrotic lesions (dead tissue). First apparent on the tips and margins of the leaves. Stem and branches may become weak and easily broken, the plant may also stretch. The plant will become susceptible to disease and toxicity. In addition to appearing to look like iron deficiency, the tips of the leaves curl and the edges burn and die.
Potassium - Too much sodium (Na) displaces K, causing a K deficiency. Sources of high salinity are: baking soda (sodium bicarbonate "pH-up"), too much manure, and the use of water-softening filters (which should not be used). If the problem is Na, flush the soil. K can get locked up from too much Ca or ammonium nitrogen, and possibly cold weather.

 
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