Help with possible ph problem

I’m trying to figure out why this plant is turning yellow. It doesn’t seem to be affecting one area more than the other necessarily although you can see down below where the smaller buds are the leaves are quite green. Fan leaves towards the bottom are yellowing and on the top.

I’m 21 days into flowering. I need to fix this problem now if I’m going to get anything worthwhile off this planet. I’m using general organics Lyne and I will have to admit I have not been Testing PH because if you have good enough organic soil then it’s not a issue. I’m only in 3 gallon pots and I did add some super soil ingredients to the mixture but I’ve only been using a small amount of liquid nutes. The plant seems to be thriving except for the yellowing. I fed it one watering ago. I flushed it yesterday. My well water is right around pH 6.8 to 7. My pH meter is a pretty shitty but it gives me a roundabout answer so I know it’s fairly close to being on point.

It shouldn’t be a nitrogen problem especially 21 days in.

Thank you for any help I may receive

Oh my other plants are in 5 gallon super soil. this was an extra one that I tossed in and figured I’d use some liquid nutes from last year

Let me know if you need any more information. Every other plan I have is doing excellent except for this one. It’s got to be something with the PH or something else I’m not thinking of.

If pH is my problem then I’m not sure what to do at this point. I flushed it yesterday and it doesn’t seem to be getting better. Maybe it needs a heavy feeding? I don’t think it needs a heavy feeding because it got a really solid feeding two waters ago in the problem got worse

thank you
 

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Dontjudgeme

Well-Known Member
Are the plants all the same strain? And I must say, that’s the first time I’ve ever heard of having organic soil that doesn’t require ph’ing, or any other soil for that matter, but I won’t discredit the possibility of that being true. I’ve always ph’d my water, no matter how I am growing. But aside from that, flushing can sometimes make things worse. For me it’s never really been necessary. If I notice an issue and feel it’s toxicity related, I just stop feeding and only supply water until I see the problem go away. The leafs with the yellowing unfortunately won’t go back to being green. If you flushed her heavily I would feed to make up for whatever you washed out of the soil. If you bottle feed, I’m fairly confident that the ph of your water after adding the Nutes went down. If you didn’t “ Ph up “ to 6.5-7, the plant never utilized what you fed it. I grow organically myself, and while I don’t necessarily have to ph in between feedings, I do have to ph when adding things like molasses, kelp, guano, and calmag if it calls for it. Getting your hands on a functional ph meter would be in your best interest especially if you plan on bottle feeding, otherwise you’re just guessing.
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
Getting your hands on a functional ph meter would be in your best interest especially if you plan on bottle feeding, otherwise you’re just guessing.
Even better, get a good soil pH meter like the blue lab. This will measure liquid pH just fine but also allows you to quantify the root zone pH in your soil. This is key because it's often way different than your feed pH.
 

Wattzzup

Well-Known Member
Even better, get a good soil pH meter like the blue lab. This will measure liquid pH just fine but also allows you to quantify the root zone pH in your soil. This is key because it's often way different than your feed pH.
Do you recommend ph’ing organic soil?
 

Wattzzup

Well-Known Member
I have never grown organic soil and never will. Too much guess work and not enough control (control freak here lol). I personally believe that pH matters regardless of organics or not and that some who claim pH is not important with organic soil are just lucky.
I might give it another go down the road. But it takes so damn long to see if what you added makes any difference.
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
I’m trying to figure out why this plant is turning yellow. It doesn’t seem to be affecting one area more than the other necessarily although you can see down below where the smaller buds are the leaves are quite green. Fan leaves towards the bottom are yellowing and on the top.

I’m 21 days into flowering. I need to fix this problem now if I’m going to get anything worthwhile off this planet. I’m using general organics Lyne and I will have to admit I have not been Testing PH because if you have good enough organic soil then it’s not a issue. I’m only in 3 gallon pots and I did add some super soil ingredients to the mixture but I’ve only been using a small amount of liquid nutes. The plant seems to be thriving except for the yellowing. I fed it one watering ago. I flushed it yesterday. My well water is right around pH 6.8 to 7. My pH meter is a pretty shitty but it gives me a roundabout answer so I know it’s fairly close to being on point.

It shouldn’t be a nitrogen problem especially 21 days in.

Thank you for any help I may receive

Oh my other plants are in 5 gallon super soil. this was an extra one that I tossed in and figured I’d use some liquid nutes from last year

Let me know if you need any more information. Every other plan I have is doing excellent except for this one. It’s got to be something with the PH or something else I’m not thinking of.

If pH is my problem then I’m not sure what to do at this point. I flushed it yesterday and it doesn’t seem to be getting better. Maybe it needs a heavy feeding? I don’t think it needs a heavy feeding because it got a really solid feeding two waters ago in the problem got worse

thank you
What kinda super soil ingredients did you add, and to what soil?
 
I have never grown organic soil and never will. Too much guess work and not enough control (control freak here lol). I personally believe that pH matters regardless of organics or not and that some who claim pH is not important with organic soil are just lucky.
You should read up on super soil and no-till organic farming those people would disagree with you. When you have a heavy microbial activity pH is almost irrelevant.
 
Then my micros decide they don’t want to do shit that day. Lazy bastards! :bigjoint:
I was just telling the other guy that you should read up on super soil and no till farming. There’s a book called teaming with microbes. It’s all about how microbiology works in organic soil. Super soil and no till farming is way way easier than bottle nutrients. All the food is contained within the super soil for the plant from start to finish and all you need is to water. You can add compost tea‘s and what not but watering is the only thing that’s necessary. You don’t have to pH your water and it’s irrelevant Because the microbiology has a symbiotic relationship with the plant and its roots. The microbiology breaks down the food and makes it easily available to the roots and the PH becomes irrelevant. I promise you that it’s not about luck. There are thousands And thousands of people doing this That understand it and it has nothing to do with luck. It’s all about the microbiology In this soil
 
Are the plants all the same strain? And I must say, that’s the first time I’ve ever heard of having organic soil that doesn’t require ph’ing, or any other soil for that matter, but I won’t discredit the possibility of that being true. I’ve always ph’d my water, no matter how I am growing. But aside from that, flushing can sometimes make things worse. For me it’s never really been necessary. If I notice an issue and feel it’s toxicity related, I just stop feeding and only supply water until I see the problem go away. The leafs with the yellowing unfortunately won’t go back to being green. If you flushed her heavily I would feed to make up for whatever you washed out of the soil. If you bottle feed, I’m fairly confident that the ph of your water after adding the Nutes went down. If you didn’t “ Ph up “ to 6.5-7, the plant never utilized what you fed it. I grow organically myself, and while I don’t necessarily have to ph in between feedings, I do have to ph when adding things like molasses, kelp, guano, and calmag if it calls for it. Getting your hands on a functional ph meter would be in your best interest especially if you plan on bottle feeding, otherwise you’re just guessing.
Are the plants all the same strain? And I must say, that’s the first time I’ve ever heard of having organic soil that doesn’t require ph’ing, or any other soil for that matter, but I won’t discredit the possibility of that being true. I’ve always ph’d my water, no matter how I am growing. But aside from that, flushing can sometimes make things worse. For me it’s never really been necessary. If I notice an issue and feel it’s toxicity related, I just stop feeding and only supply water until I see the problem go away. The leafs with the yellowing unfortunately won’t go back to being green. If you flushed her heavily I would feed to make up for whatever you washed out of the soil. If you bottle feed, I’m fairly confident that the ph of your water after adding the Nutes went down. If you didn’t “ Ph up “ to 6.5-7, the plant never utilized what you fed it. I grow organically myself, and while I don’t necessarily have to ph in between feedings, I do have to ph when adding things like molasses, kelp, guano, and calmag if it calls for it. Getting your hands on a functional ph meter would be in your best interest especially if you plan on bottle feeding, otherwise you’re just guessing.
I’ve already mentioned this twice and I’m gonna mention it again. You should check out super soil and no till farming. No Bottled nutrients needed and no pH meters needed. Many people have had great success with with this and it’s not just some hoax. Microbiology in the soil is the reason that you do not have to PH. When there’s a thriving microbial population you don’t need to feed bottle nutes and you don’t need to pH the water.
I just happen to have an extra plant that I stuck in a 3 gallon pot and had some general organics liquid nutes lying. I’m guessing it’s the PH which is why I flushed so I don’t know now I guess I’ll just have to wait and see
 

Wattzzup

Well-Known Member
I was just telling the other guy that you should read up on super soil and no till farming. There’s a book called teaming with microbes. It’s all about how microbiology works in organic soil. Super soil and no till farming is way way easier than bottle nutrients. All the food is contained within the super soil for the plant from start to finish and all you need is to water. You can add compost tea‘s and what not but watering is the only thing that’s necessary. You don’t have to pH your water and it’s irrelevant Because the microbiology has a symbiotic relationship with the plant and its roots. The microbiology breaks down the food and makes it easily available to the roots and the PH becomes irrelevant. I promise you that it’s not about luck. There are thousands And thousands of people doing this That understand it and it has nothing to do with luck. It’s all about the microbiology In this soil
That’s great but I already have gnats. Now you want me to bring in worms and turn my grow area into a garbage disposal? I’ll pass. If I had the space to do these things I would love to. I just personally don’t have the space.

Learning to build super soil is a whole other world. I’m still working on growing the damn plants.
 
What kinda super soil ingredients did you add, and to what soil?
It’s normal super soil ingredients (to many to name right now). I’m growing them in my other pots with great success. The other pots have dirt that cooked and sat for about a month. I have two 3 gallon pots that are having the issue. They have the same super soil ingredients but it’s small quantity of it.

i’m actually wondering if these plants are root bound. I’m thinking about trans planning because if they’re root bound or if there’s a pH issue then I can probably solve it by getting it in some fresh dirt with decent microbial activity
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
It’s normal super soil ingredients (to many to name right now). I’m growing them in my other pots with great success. The other pots have dirt that cooked and sat for about a month. I have two 3 gallon pots that are having the issue. They have the same super soil ingredients but it’s small quantity of it.

i’m actually wondering if these plants are root bound. I’m thinking about trans planning because if they’re root bound or if there’s a pH issue then I can probably solve it by getting it in some fresh dirt with decent microbial activity
Pics will help to start with. I'm a no-till newbie and it's definitely a learning experience. I don't have anything mastered by any means, but am learning constantly. And, @Renfro has helped me a lot, even though he doesn't grow organic. Show him respect, and you will thank me later, lol.

Post pics though, and even the hydro guys can tell you what you're missing. This is not a diss on you hydro guys ..... Ren, lol.

And if this was in the Organics section you might get more advice. @Richard Drysift is pretty helpful.
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
The thing I like about using bottle feed is that I can change the balance of nutrients at a whim, forcing flavor and terpene production when the time is right, forcing magnesium when the time is right, being low on nitrogen when the time is right. It's what works for me, like I said I have no interest in working so hard as to deal with "super soil", worms, bugs and all that jazz.
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
The thing I like about using bottle feed is that I can change the balance of nutrients at a whim, forcing flavor and terpene production when the time is right, forcing magnesium when the time is right, being low on nitrogen when the time is right. It's what works for me, like I said I have no interest in working so hard as to deal with "super soil", worms, bugs and all that jazz.
I would never question your grow methods man. If you ever did try organics, I have a feeling you'd kick ass. I'm actually doing no-till so I don't have to do as much work. I don't have room to setup irrigation and all that, so it's hand watering for me. I like just giving plain water, but I have a long ways to go trying to figure this shit out. Plus it's a lot slower process for the nutrients to be accessible to the plants.

Again, I would never want to challenge you to a grow off, lol.
 
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