ShirkGoldbrick
Active Member
-Growing indoors
-Watering when top two inches of soil is dry
-Started in Miracle grow moisture control, realized that was a mistake, transplanted to foxfarms ocean forest with some dolomite lime
-380 watts real LED over a 2x5' area
-2.5-3 weeks old
I had another thread going on the possibility of too much light and leaf septoria but I think that my problem is due to pH lockout. This posting is sort of a repost but I wanted to ensure that the title of the thread matched the problem so that others can reference it later and so that I can get the fastest most correct response.
I took some better pics, ignore the whitish glossy covering on the leaves it's just buildup from the magnesium sulfate/chelated iron foliar feeding I was giving them yesterday before I realized that Iron is most certainly available but it's NPK, Calmag, and S that are unavailable right now.
So too much water = too much released nutes from FFOF = possible toxicity in some nutrients and lockout in the rest due to low pH from excess available nutrients lowering the soils pH?
Looking at this pH availability chart is why I'm guessing that the problem isn't with iron but probably sulfur and magnesium as well as NPK.
I'm basing this pH off of one of those cheap light/moisture/pH things with the two probes. I actually watered with water of a pH of about 8 with ~230ppm Alkalinity, 50ppm Ca, and 15ppm Mg but I'm thinking it's the soil's pH that matters not what I watered with?
So what can I do now to correct the problem?
1. I added just over a table spoon per 3 gallon pot of fast acting lime (http://www.amazon.com/Encap-10612-12-Acting-Pounds-400-Square/dp/B00140ILX8/)
2. I've been foliar feeding with dynagrow foliage pro (will this help?)
3. So do I just stop watering until the soil is almost bone dry and then only water a little bit around the edges of the pot?
4. Can I put some powdered pH up in the soil or what? I did order some pH up in powder form. Or will that just raise the pH way too high once the moisture levels fall and the nutrients become less available (if drying out lowers pH)?
Or are they just going to slowly die? lol
-Watering when top two inches of soil is dry
-Started in Miracle grow moisture control, realized that was a mistake, transplanted to foxfarms ocean forest with some dolomite lime
-380 watts real LED over a 2x5' area
-2.5-3 weeks old
I had another thread going on the possibility of too much light and leaf septoria but I think that my problem is due to pH lockout. This posting is sort of a repost but I wanted to ensure that the title of the thread matched the problem so that others can reference it later and so that I can get the fastest most correct response.
I took some better pics, ignore the whitish glossy covering on the leaves it's just buildup from the magnesium sulfate/chelated iron foliar feeding I was giving them yesterday before I realized that Iron is most certainly available but it's NPK, Calmag, and S that are unavailable right now.
So too much water = too much released nutes from FFOF = possible toxicity in some nutrients and lockout in the rest due to low pH from excess available nutrients lowering the soils pH?
Looking at this pH availability chart is why I'm guessing that the problem isn't with iron but probably sulfur and magnesium as well as NPK.
I'm basing this pH off of one of those cheap light/moisture/pH things with the two probes. I actually watered with water of a pH of about 8 with ~230ppm Alkalinity, 50ppm Ca, and 15ppm Mg but I'm thinking it's the soil's pH that matters not what I watered with?
So what can I do now to correct the problem?
1. I added just over a table spoon per 3 gallon pot of fast acting lime (http://www.amazon.com/Encap-10612-12-Acting-Pounds-400-Square/dp/B00140ILX8/)
2. I've been foliar feeding with dynagrow foliage pro (will this help?)
3. So do I just stop watering until the soil is almost bone dry and then only water a little bit around the edges of the pot?
4. Can I put some powdered pH up in the soil or what? I did order some pH up in powder form. Or will that just raise the pH way too high once the moisture levels fall and the nutrients become less available (if drying out lowers pH)?
Or are they just going to slowly die? lol