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  1.     
    #1
    Junior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    Buds look good but I'm getting worried about how the rest of the plants look and the rate that the fan leaves are yellowing. Found some gnats the other day and fogged with Permethrum. Also some kind of scale found on the leaves. Are the bugs causing the yellowing, or do I have some deficiencies also?



    Experience level? Novice

    Your medium:
    .7) Specific brand and type of soil: Mix of Natures Best and Black Gold Potting Soils
    .8) Size of container: 5 gallon
    .9) Did you use peat pucks (or similar) to root clones or germinate seedlings? no

    Your nutrients and water:
    10) Source of water? Tap. What's it's ph before adjusting? 6
    15) Any additives or tea's? Bat Guano/molasses tea
    16) Are your ph levels stable, or do they fluctuate? pretty stable

    Your growroom:
    19) Indoors or outdoors? Outdoors, green house
    20) What size of closet, room or hut? 10 x 12
    22) Have you seen signs of insects in the growroom?
    Yes, some gnats, bit of scale on leaves. Fogged with Permethrum 3 days ago
    Your strain:
    23) What strain are you growing? Super silver haze, Jack Herrer, Grape Kush
    24) From seeds or clones? Clones
    eugenegreen Reviewed by eugenegreen on . Budding well, but plants not looking great Buds look good but I'm getting worried about how the rest of the plants look and the rate that the fan leaves are yellowing. Found some gnats the other day and fogged with Permethrum. Also some kind of scale found on the leaves. Are the bugs causing the yellowing, or do I have some deficiencies also? Experience level? Novice Your medium: .7) Specific brand and type of soil: Mix of Natures Best and Black Gold Potting Soils .8) Size of container: 5 gallon .9) Did you use peat Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    Peat-based soils will lose their buffering after a couple of months. And an ingoing water ph of 6.0 is too low to begin with. For peat-based soils, a ph range of between 6.3 and 6.8 is recommended. If you wander outside of that range, you'll start locking-out the plants ability to uptake certain nutrients.

    Do you make your own tea? How much molasses per gallon are you adding, and how often?

  4.     
    #3
    Junior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    Actually it appears that the pH is somewhat closer to 7, but I'm using one of those light/moisture/pH meters that I'm a bit skeptical of. I started using the guano/molasses tea pretty recently, mixing 1 tablespoon of guano and 1 teaspoon of molasses per gallon of water.
    I'm attaching another picture of the scale I'm finding on the leaves now. Haven't seen anything like it before, so not sure if it's from bugs or if it's contributing to the decline. Thanks for your help

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    what bat guano are you using? they vary wildly in nutritional content.

    to me they appear to be nitrogen deficient. it looks as if it first showed in the oldest growth and is progressing up the middle, yet to touch the new growth. this is a classic sign of a nitrogen deficiency. treat with a readily available source of nitrogen. yes i know you are in flowering, but nitrogen is still used during flowering. i assume you are trying to stay organic?

    you are in oregon? when do you think optimum harvest time would be?


    -shake

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    Quote Originally Posted by eugenegreen
    Actually it appears that the pH is somewhat closer to 7, but I'm using one of those light/moisture/pH meters
    those meters are inaccurate junk.

    Quote Originally Posted by headshake
    what bat guano are you using? they vary wildly in nutritional content.

    to me they appear to be nitrogen deficient. it looks as if it first showed in the oldest growth and is progressing up the middle, yet to touch the new growth. this is a classic sign of a nitrogen deficiency. treat with a readily available source of nitrogen. yes i know you are in flowering, but nitrogen is still used during flowering. i assume you are trying to stay organic?

    you are in oregon? when do you think optimum harvest time would be?


    -shake
    im curious on how many harvest you had under your belt? i see you give tons of advice. usually if there is a n deficiency the whole plant will get pale in my experience and the big fan leave stems will not turn purple/red. new growth will also turn more pale faster than the older growth. listen to rusty

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    Quote Originally Posted by cigarettes42
    those meters are inaccurate junk.



    im curious on how many harvest you had under your belt? i see you give tons of advice. usually if there is a n deficiency the whole plant will get pale in my experience and the big fan leave stems will not turn purple/red. new growth will also turn more pale faster than the older growth. listen to rusty
    i have more harvests under my belt than i care to count. i'm no professional by any stretch of the imagination. but my definition of a nitrogen deficiency starting in the older leaves and progression to the middle and finally the new growth is spot on. nitrogen is a mobile element, therefore it MOVES to the new growth manifesting itself in the older growth, the the second oldest and so forth. and yes, eventually even the new growth will be pale (this is very common in over-watered soil plants).

    i never mentioned red/purple stems, but that can ALSO be a indicator of a N deficiency as well, but not always as it can also indicate a phosphorus deficiency (as well as being normal in some strains).

    i'd rather post something that might jump-start a conversation or spark a discussion to help get more answers or problems solved the sit back and try to look "cool" on the cannabis site. i like to try to give back, period. if you don't cool.

    you also grow in hydro a lot correct? (if not my mistake.) anyhow, if you do, problems obviously tend to manifest (and rectify) themselves a lot faster in hydro as opposed to soil. perhaps this is why your new growth appears to turn green first. or perhaps you are having pH issues and its the result of another deficiency altogether.

    either way, the fact of the matter is that mobile elements (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, magnesium and zinc) start to show in old growth first, and work their way up the plant.


    -shake

  8.     
    #7
    Senior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    i meant to add this to my post.

    -shake

  9.     
    #8
    Senior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    its nice to see that you copy and paste everything you know and ignore the fact that this guy has a bad ph. dont you think a ph around 7 could cause lockout? but your focus is on giving it more nutes. i think i seen one of your first grow logs that you deleted and didnt look impressive. it looked ok but very novice. i remember stinky commenting on someones thread awhile back and you put out some wrong info and you said "thats what you always said, or what the book says" and she said experience is the key, not what a book says. and yes i am a hydro grower in the winter, but a soil grower in the summer

  10.     
    #9
    Senior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    Wow. I'm not used to reading an argument without me being directly involved. Kinda weird.

    Figure-out your ingoing ph asap. If you have to, look online for your local water quality report, and see what the average is in your neighborhood. If you are using one of those $7 piece of crap moisture/ph meters from WalMart, you'll need a better plan. They are quite inaccurate. A $7 freshwater aquarium ph test kit is a more reliable test for ingoing water. Only drawback is once the water is tinted, it's color-coded result is inaccurate. Hopefully your tapwater is clear.

    Could be getting rootbound, too.

    The Scale might be residual from the bug treatment(s). Tiz always best to rinse the stuff off after treatments are complete. Or, might be residue from spraying 'em with additives or nutrients?

    Since you skipped half the pertinent questions, (like the questions about your feeding and watering schedule) I'll reserve comment on the nitrogen issue. Shortcuts can cause more problems than doing things the right way the first time. Next time, complete the entire form. It asks these questions for a damned good reason.

  11.     
    #10
    Senior Member

    Budding well, but plants not looking great

    Quote Originally Posted by cigarettes42
    its nice to see that you copy and paste everything you know and ignore the fact that this guy has a bad ph. dont you think a ph around 7 could cause lockout? but your focus is on giving it more nutes. i think i seen one of your first grow logs that you deleted and didnt look impressive. it looked ok but very novice. i remember stinky commenting on someones thread awhile back and you put out some wrong info and you said "thats what you always said, or what the book says" and she said experience is the key, not what a book says. and yes i am a hydro grower in the winter, but a soil grower in the summer
    i don't copy and paste everything i know. i was merely using it as a reference to support my point (kinda like they do in scientific papers & studies, huh?). a pH of 7 is not horrible. it's .2 above the high end of the recommended range for soil. my focus wasn't for giving just nutes, it was a specific recommendation. i didn't tell this person what to do. i was merely giving my OPINION, same as everyone else.

    he's only feeding with molasses and guano. if the guano he's using isn't high in N then where is it coming from? cannabis loves N. this coupled with the fact that those buds look very immature, that plant shouldn't be fading that bad, in my OPINION.

    if you go back and READ the post the original troubleshooting form said he water's pH before adjusting is 6, then later he say's later it's CLOSER to a 7. so the pH isn't really known.

    i do agree that his pH is of the utmost importance. but since you are the dr., please give us your professional opinion. what element would be locked out at a pH of 7 even, that would cause the plant to look like this? it would have to be a mobile element since again, it appears to be showing first in the lower, older growth and progressing to the middle (and i assume eventually the top).

    those plants appear to be in the ground. they also appear to be quite large, and if they are indeed as big as they look, they would have used up all of the available N up very quickly. nitrogen is active in young buds. those buds appear to be pretty young. so put this with the fact that there is possibly no nitrogen source leads me to my conclusion.

    which of my first grow logs did you see that i deleted? how in the hell would i have deleted my own growlog anyhow? does anyone else not a mod or admin have the ability to do this? anyone?

    hell, go back and look through my old grow logs. my first one wasn't impressive. i started out with a $10 fluro tube for "growing plants" and an aluminum-lined cardboard box, wrong soil, wrong nutes. any problem that you could encounter i probably ran into. but thanks to the HELP from all the great people here at cann.com and my reading everything i could get my eyes on i gained knowledge to apply to gain this experience you speak of.

    all of my first grows were in cardboard. each progressively better, both in my results and in my setup as well.

    as a matter of fact, here's the link.

    http://boards.cannabis.com/grow-log/...irst-grow.html

    lol. looking at that makes me laugh!

    here's my second

    http://boards.cannabis.com/grow-log/...hettoness.html

    they are all there, just search for them. not a hint of deleted logs. if you would have looked for posts by me you would have seen them all. you also would have noticed that i've probably got more posts in my OWN growlogs than you have on the forums (not that number of posts matters, just your questioning my ability to give advice or number of my harvests).

    and congrats on recalling a post where stinky corrected and chastised me. i don't think there is a person on the boards that stinky couldn't correct or one she hasn't chastised for that matter.

    i've taken the liberty to attach a soil pH chart so you can give your advice. i wan't something more than it's pH.

    i've also attached a pic from my third or fourth grow. but i obviously have no clue as to what i'm doing. that was under CFLs (the bud is a little light and airy as is common with CFLs). my lights come on at 7, i'll be sure to get a couple of pics for ya!


    -shake

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