Sure wish you had come in sooner. Kinda late to be making these changes...but ya gotta do what ya gotta do, and it'll be a good learning experience.

Nothing but plain, properly ph'd water till she recovers from the transplant. Let soil dry between waterings. Her new growth will tell you how she's doing. Old, yellowed leaves are old news, and won't recover much vigor or color.

Did you already transplant? If so, according to Miracle Grow, there will be an initial release of nitrogen. IMHO, the best way to deal with that for flowering is a good, (at least a gallon of water for every gallon of pot size) and slow flush with properly ph'd water. This is an attempt to wash-away that initial kick. There will be a little stress from the transplant and the new (fresh) nutrients. After the initial release, it's a quazi-balanced nutrient delivery with every watering. Watch for reaction before offering any more nutrients, and likely she's far enough along that you shouldn't need more nutrients. Perhaps some unsulfered molasses at one teaspoon per gallon per week.

If you haven't transplanted yet, you can flush the MG soil prior to use. But then you get to play with goopy, clumpy, sticky soil for the transplant.

Your plants should let you know if they want more flowering nutrients. If you aren't sure, ask here first. Most likely you won't need to feed her again. :thumbsup:

I'm guessing that Wardley is a color-coded test kit...? Most color-coded test kits are accurate enough for clear liquids, but keep in mind that tinted water skews the results.