is this normal for 4 weeks in flowering? pics pics

gotot

Well-Known Member
the buds look good but to me the leaves look like nute burn.
i swear that's like impossible i only feed them nutes every 3 days and i use gal amounts in 5 gal pots my other plants are having the same issue leaves getting crispy and dry
 

InsaneMJ

Well-Known Member
maby a lack of water, and like the other guy said a lack of potassium because that happened to a few of my plants, if anything try to give it a bit more nutes, and cut off the burned partes
 

LUDACRIS

New Member
thats an easy one.
TIP BURN.
causes.
(1) tin foil/reflective heat tip burning.
(2) too hot/lights too close.
(3) windburn(fanning).
 

KodieD

Active Member
mid 80s durring day and then in the 60s thats a big change, i think its just too hot by a few degrees tips are burning thats all, when you gonna finish?
 

TheDankness

Well-Known Member
I think its nutrient burn. You may not be adding too much, but if you are growing in soil it may already be at its full holding capacity for nutrients. If your plant isn't using all of the nutrients you're feeding it, they will remain in the soil. If you keep on the same feeding schedule this excess will build up and eventually burn your plants. I don't think it's heat stress, if it were, it would be really bad at the top of the plant and less damage at the bottom. Looks like its pretty much all over. I would just feed with plain water for a couple weeks, can't really hurt. If you've been feeding regularly I doubt its a deficiency. I would say there is a 40% chance its the heat and a 60% chance its the nutes. There's my two cents anyway.
 

MrFishy

Well-Known Member
I'd guess over-fed and too high temps. So you give it food to produce when the plants telling itself to start using the built up nutes from the grow . . . and then, in nature anyway, the temps would start lowering at natural harvest time, perhaps?
I've read several times that a 15*F drop while the lights are out is acceptable.
Those canoe-ing leaves may be too close to your source.
 
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