robnarley1111
Active Member
Afghan Skunk...is it anything like Super Skunk?
One thing I noticed that no one mentioned is the yellowing of the inner canopy leaves might not be caused due to any nutrient deficiencies, but due to lack of light penetration. When leaves are getting adequate light directly on them, they begin to yellow and eventually fall off, unable to properly photosynthesize
nutrients to stay healthy. So it may not be something you'd really have to worry about as long as most of your leaves are healthy. My Northern Lights plant has/had the same issue, and I realized it's due to penetration of light from dense foliage growth.
One thing that could help is putting reflectors on each of your CFL bundles; that would allow more intense light to hit the canopy, instead of lost lumens, since a large percentage of your light is possibly lost bouncing off the walls and around the space, not necessarily concentrated directly on the plants as you may want them for max bud growth. CFLs really have to be placed in a small space, or bundled with good reflection in a small space (such as a CFL hood/reflector), in order to get high light intensity. Otherwise you get good coverage, but little intensity per sq ft.
Everything is looking nice and I look forward to seeing some huge flowers soon. Subbing for your grow...I'm a big fan and student of growing with CFLs myself!
One thing I noticed that no one mentioned is the yellowing of the inner canopy leaves might not be caused due to any nutrient deficiencies, but due to lack of light penetration. When leaves are getting adequate light directly on them, they begin to yellow and eventually fall off, unable to properly photosynthesize
nutrients to stay healthy. So it may not be something you'd really have to worry about as long as most of your leaves are healthy. My Northern Lights plant has/had the same issue, and I realized it's due to penetration of light from dense foliage growth.
One thing that could help is putting reflectors on each of your CFL bundles; that would allow more intense light to hit the canopy, instead of lost lumens, since a large percentage of your light is possibly lost bouncing off the walls and around the space, not necessarily concentrated directly on the plants as you may want them for max bud growth. CFLs really have to be placed in a small space, or bundled with good reflection in a small space (such as a CFL hood/reflector), in order to get high light intensity. Otherwise you get good coverage, but little intensity per sq ft.
Everything is looking nice and I look forward to seeing some huge flowers soon. Subbing for your grow...I'm a big fan and student of growing with CFLs myself!