What to do if you have light stress in week 5 of bloom?

bk78

Well-Known Member
Too much light is normally accompanied by tacoed leaves.


Also your light won’t magnify the water drops and burn your plants, that’s just nonsense

if that were the case every tree and shrub outside would be burnt from the suns intensity after a rain storm.
 

twentyeight.threefive

Well-Known Member
Looks to me like you just need to feed more nutrients. You don't want water on the plants when you have intense or powerful lighting on above them. Think of ants under a magnifying glass. The leaves are the ants and the water droplets are the magnifying glasses.
As stated by @bk78 light doesn't magnify water drops and burn the plants. That's pure perpetuated bro-science.

Also you could have at least said thank you for the PM I sent you.
 

Markshomegrown

Well-Known Member
Too much light is normally accompanied by tacoed leaves.


Also your light won’t magnify the water drops and burn your plants, that’s just nonsense

if that were the case every tree and shrub outside would be burnt from the suns intensity after a rain storm.
Screenshot_20220201-003932_DuckDuckGo.jpg
Be careful OP bk78 doesn't know what he's talking about, don't spray the plants with the light on.
 

UpInSmoke420$24

Well-Known Member
yeah bro...I just was looking at your plants dripping in liquid. The light is going to torch the shit out of your plants with all those drops on your leaves. Try to only foliar spray like 15 minutes before lights off, and when I do that I usually dim the light down a bit too. Gives them time too dry up a little bit with lower powered light and the fans going before the lights go out. By the time the lights go out they will almost be dry...that way you don't have to worry about mold PM or anything. And I don't really suggest foliar spraying anywhere after middle of flower. Could cause bud rot.
 

Markshomegrown

Well-Known Member
yeah bro...I just was looking at your plants dripping in liquid. The light is going to torch the shit out of your plants with all those drops on your leaves. Try to only foliar spray like 15 minutes before lights off, and when I do that I usually dim the light down a bit too. Gives them time too dry up a little bit with lower powered light and the fans going before the lights go out. By the time the lights go out they will almost be dry...that way you don't have to worry about mold PM or anything. And I don't really suggest foliar spraying anywhere after middle of flower. Could cause bud rot.
Great advice
 

Rurumo

Well-Known Member
I spray all my plants with some kind of IPM weekly during veg and always do it with the lights on, I've never had any issues with burning. I don't spray in flower unless I have some specific issue because the humidity it creates could allow some pathogen to take hold. If you have some botrytis somewhere, it will spread with the water like wildfire.
 

UpInSmoke420$24

Well-Known Member
As long as you have good fan airflow then they will dry right up without burning them. I always give them a good shake too after I spray to make sure there is not any large drops on the leaves. The water drops intensify the light...acting like the sun ray through a magnifying glass and burning your leaves
 

Markshomegrown

Well-Known Member
I spray all my plants with some kind of IPM weekly during veg and always do it with the lights on, I've never had any issues with burning. I don't spray in flower unless I have some specific issue because the humidity it creates could allow some pathogen to take hold. If you have some botrytis somewhere, it will spread with the water like wildfire.
In general veg lights are weaker and the plants replacing the leaves, spraying a hot canopy can cause lots of damage and under hps it's really dangerous.
 

UpInSmoke420$24

Well-Known Member
I mean, yeah, you can get away with foliar spraying with the lights on...but that is also depending on a lot of factors. Humidity, light intensity from your grow light, if your shaking them off after, how much your spraying, and especially what you are spraying. You can also spray in morning right when lights go on and dim them a bit for a half hour or so and let them dry. Then put light back up
 
Top