Quote Originally Posted by nevergetsold
McDanger and tdoe805er:
I did flush with water adjusted down with white vinegar to about 5.5. That did help the pH because now I am watering with Pro Grow which is pulling my water down to about 6 and the runoff is dropping, last time it was at 6.5. I have also transplanted into a 3 gallon pot with regular MG and added more light. I just wrote the following "The plant is still growing but the leaves haven't improved much if any" then went to look at them and take photos. Judge for yourself (Photo 1 was taken on 6/7, #2 on 6/12, #3, #4, #5 on 6/12 and show the "babies which are now 5" tall). It is way better in less than one week.

I am thinking back and the problem may have been that I used MG Organic for this plant, and regular MG for the other two. The other two are small but the leaves look fine, and their pH runoff was never high, so the difference was probably the MG organic. I still can't tell if this is male or female so will keep on until I know. I also compromised with the lighting and went to 22/2 on 6/7 to give it a little break.

So I would say as everyone here suspected, it was a pH problem that I have gotten under control. The bigger pot and more light certainly might helped, and perhaps the 22/2 might have helped but first and foremost I think it was the pH, and the MG Organic was the culprit.
Sound good. I think mine was caused by adding composted manure to the soil mix. Otherwise the sta-green soil seems fine only adding 25% perlite.
Your damaged leaves will not get better, but new growth should not get the problem.