Diagnosis please

Ukulele Haze

Well-Known Member
Could you please let us know what you're lighting setup is and your nutrient regimen?

Based on the photos, the soil looks dry and the leaves look a little droopy to me. When was the last time you watered, and how much?
 

Stone Age

Member
It was last watered last Saturday with Big Bloom, Recharge, and CaliMagic, all at the recommended dosages. I don't remember how much it was exactly; I'd guess maybe a quart.

Soil is FFHF closest to the plant, with the rest being FFOF. I'm not sure whether the roots have hit the OF yet, but I suspect they have.

The soil is dry on top, but feels a bit moist deeper down.

Light is HLG 260 at 100%, distance is around 22". Thanks!
 

Ukulele Haze

Well-Known Member
Do you think it could be light burn? Your plant doesn't look to be at the stage for that kind of intensity to me.
 
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Stone Age

Member
It doesn't look like the pics I've seen of light burn (and I think I did have light burn on my older plants a while back), but I agree that it's a lot of intensity for a plant that size. Unfortunately, it's sharing a tent with some much older plants, which have gone into flower, so I can't raise the light any further.

BTW, this is an auto Green Crack, at 22 days from sprout, if it matters.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Quite possibly some fungus going on causing that. Very poor air circulation around the base of those plants so I'd remove all the damaged leaves and maybe a few more lower ones to open up the bottom a bunch.

Not going to be light burn down there but possible toxic salts buildup tho it's a little early for that. You shouldn't be adding any nutes yet with the rich soil you have in there. How big are those bags? Even if only a gallon there's still lots of food in that soil. Any particular reason to not fill them up? Would help air movement if they were near flush to the top of the bags. Really early for Bloom food.

:peace:

PS: When you water you should be soaking the pot real good then letting it dry down until it feels light. It can be dry 3" down but still soaking wet in the bottom half.
 
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Kassiopeija

Well-Known Member
Not going to be light burn down there but possible toxic salts buildup tho it's a little early for that. You shouldn't be adding any nutes yet with the rich soil you have in there. How big are those bags? Even if only a gallon there's still lots of food in that soil. Any particular reason to not fill them up? Would help air movement if they were near flush to the top of the bags. Really early for Bloom food.

:peace:

PS: When you water you should be soaking the pot real good then letting it dry down until it feels light. It can be dry 3" down but still soaking wet in the bottom half.
I second this. With such a tiny plant in such a big pot the dangers of over-fertilization are much more imminent & severe as the begin of a NPK deficiency.
 

Stone Age

Member
Quite possibly some fungus going on causing that. Very poor air circulation around the base of those plants so I'd remove all the damaged leaves and maybe a few more lower ones to open up the bottom a bunch.

Not going to be light burn down there but possible toxic salts buildup tho it's a little early for that. You shouldn't be adding any nutes yet with the rich soil you have in there. How big are those bags? Even if only a gallon there's still lots of food in that soil. Any particular reason to not fill them up? Would help air movement if they were near flush to the top of the bags. Really early for Bloom food.

:peace:

PS: When you water you should be soaking the pot real good then letting it dry down until it feels light. It can be dry 3" down but still soaking wet in the bottom half.
Thanks for the reply. They're 3 gallon pots. The reason that the soil level is so low is that I ran out of soil. I got some more OF; I'm just trying to figure out how to repot it without disturbing the plant too much.

I also thought that it could be fungus. I'm going to order some Southern Ag's Biological Friendly Fungicide. It appears to be completely safe to use, so it can't hurt. And I should have some fungicide on hand anyway. BTW, has anyone here used this stuff?

Despite the name, FF says to use BB during the entire lifecycle. It's pretty mild, so I don't think it's hurting anything. I don't think anything I'm feeding contains salts.

One of my hypotheses is that the roots just hit the OF, and the plant doesn't like it.

And I water exactly as you suggest. I'm going to flush it with spring water, probably tonight.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Thanks for the reply. They're 3 gallon pots. The reason that the soil level is so low is that I ran out of soil. I got some more OF; I'm just trying to figure out how to repot it without disturbing the plant too much.

I also thought that it could be fungus. I'm going to order some Southern Ag's Biological Friendly Fungicide. It appears to be completely safe to use, so it can't hurt. And I should have some fungicide on hand anyway. BTW, has anyone here used this stuff?

Despite the name, FF says to use BB during the entire lifecycle. It's pretty mild, so I don't think it's hurting anything. I don't think anything I'm feeding contains salts.

One of my hypotheses is that the roots just hit the OF, and the plant doesn't like it.

And I water exactly as you suggest. I'm going to flush it with spring water, probably tonight.
If you take the bad leaves off and make sure the fan is blowing some air around the base of the plants you shouldn't need to use any fungicides and the problem should go away. If the plants didn't like the OF you'd be seeing nute burn on upper leaves so flushing is not the answer either. Some runoff wouldn't hurt tho.

:peace:
 

70's natureboy

Well-Known Member
It just seems like a normal ffof thread to me. It could be over nuted or it could be under nuted, you just never know what is in your bag of ffof.
 
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