Week 4 from sprout(Help Needed)

Dynamo626

Well-Known Member
actually my bad you were talking abought the seed leaves falling off. I was talking abought the trues. I think the first true leaf dieing may be strain related. when I did the strawberry cake they came off really early. been doing thc bomb over a year and I usually pull them off before they fall off
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Each strain is different too tho. Some will keep every leaf green to the end where others will start yellowing older leaves after a couple weeks. I've had plants that still have green cotyledons at harvest where others have any older leaves yellowing soon after a few new nodes appear.

Generally if older stuff is dying off as new stuff grows well there is a nute or pH issue but it's not always the case. Stupid plants just don't want to do exactly what we want them too. :D

;peace:
 

Martin Orcutt

Active Member
So my girl is a month old looking pretty. However the first set of true leaves are turning yellow. She's just under 1 standard home cfl bulb and eating Alaska fish fertilizer (hardly any mixed in) so it can't be nute burns. Or light burn any other suggestions
Its fine the very bottom levees will yrllow and fall off everytime
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
Most ppl consider organics slow release.. I didn't imply anything.. Don't tell me what I meant...
No, they don't, because it's a different type of nutrient system. Yes, organics take time to break down, because the rhizobacillus has to eat organic matter and shit out what the plants can take up. "Slow release" implies chelated synthetic nutrients that leach from pellets which use fillers to slow the release of nutrients so that it's distributed over time. There's an important distinction between "slow/controlled release nutrients" and "organic nutrients." Say organic if it's organic.

Don't get so snippy. Most people don't think of organics as "time released," they think of it as organic. It isn't the same thing.
 

HydoDan

Well-Known Member
No, they don't, because it's a different type of nutrient system. Yes, organics take time to break down, because the rhizobacillus has to eat organic matter and shit out what the plants can take up. "Slow release" implies chelated synthetic nutrients that leach from pellets which use fillers to slow the release of nutrients so that it's distributed over time. There's an important distinction between "slow/controlled release nutrients" and "organic nutrients." Say organic if it's organic.

Don't get so snippy. Most people don't think of organics as "time released," they think of it as organic. It isn't the same thing.
Ignored!
 
So I decided to top her today, just want to make sure I did it right and how long till she's completely rocovered? Also what benefits should I start seeing right now? Thanks
 

Dynamo626

Well-Known Member
you will not see anything right away, in a few days you will notice branches growing drom each node point. slowly at first then faster as its leaves develop. the hiest ones will grow fastest. try to train them down untill the lower branches catch up
 
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