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  1.     
    #1
    Junior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    Hello to everyone!
    My cannabis is just 3 weeks old. About a week ago a problem occurred with my plant. At first, tops of the leaves became turning brown and then dried out. That necrosis slowly spread and the growth (as it seemed) slowed as well. I thought that my plant requires more fertilizers, as I was very careful about applying them.
    After adding an organic fertilizer (proper solution), just in 3!!! days my plant resumed growth, but leaves become.. well you see.

    Light: small 6400K bulb with reflector, according to my estimations plant receives up to 40 000 lm.
    Fertilizer: organic, but no specifications on a bottle (unfortunately). I was VERY careful about it. And generally, I know many people to use it successfully.
    Soil: neutral (6-7 ph)

    1. Can anyone write what is wrong with my plant? It seems to me, that there is a lack of smth.
    2. Is it possible to save my precious plant?
    Would be grateful for any opinion.

    P.S. Could the problem be with high water ph? In my region it varies from 6 to 8 (that disturbs me a lot).

    Attachment 288104Attachment 288105Attachment 288106
    Senny Reviewed by Senny on . Undefined problem (cry for help) Hello to everyone! My cannabis is just 3 weeks old. About a week ago a problem occurred with my plant. At first, tops of the leaves became turning brown and then dried out. That necrosis slowly spread and the growth (as it seemed) slowed as well. I thought that my plant requires more fertilizers, as I was very careful about applying them. After adding an organic fertilizer (proper solution), just in 3!!! days my plant resumed growth, but leaves become.. well you see. Light: small 6400K Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    about all you can do is watch the new leaves...forget about the lower old leaves.

    if the new growth looks ok?...it might make it.

  4.     
    #3
    Junior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    Well, those second-level-old leaves started dying just 2 days ago....
    Still, there is no so much of them to compare.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    Whatever you're doing on nutrients... use less, start with 1/2 of what you're currently using. Assuming those are seedlings, they don't need much now and giving them too much will cause what you see vs. making them grow faster. Also, if you have a means of measuring nutrient strength and pH, you should. Knowing what you're putting on your plants is a good and will help you avoid this kind of issue in the future.

  6.     
    #5
    Junior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    In fact I really share your opinion and by saying that I was really careful I mean that overdose is really unlikely.
    I was using doses, that were more than two times less, than recommended for young plants (though there were no specifications, there was a clear and detailed instruction about fertilizer usage).
    I do not really want to counter your words in any way, I just want to find out the real reason. Moreover, problems started before I decided to add more plant food.
    Surfed web a lot and still no answer. Many sources relate this problem to a wrong ph, which disrupts proper nutrients absorption.
    Growing is not so easy, after all Maybe someone experienced smth. similar?

    P.S. Guess I will try to flush the plant with properly ph'ed water. Is it likely to survive? Recover?

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    No worries. Flushing is always good and won't hurt a plant. Just let it dry out a bit before giving it anything else.

    Regarding your problems here, what are you using for soil?

    Farmer Rich

  8.     
    #7
    Junior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    Its just universal soil pack, bought in a common flower-selling store.
    By the way, is it possible, that plant's roots begin to rot from excess of water? Though I've got drainage holes, I'm worried a bit.

  9.     
    #8
    Senior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    Sounds like your soil may have nutrients in it, many from this source do and are wrong for weed. Plus you're adding a bit more fertilizer. In regard to the root rot question, possibly. You definitely want to let your plants dry out between watering. If these plants don't recover, you should chalk it up to learning and try again. On your next try, you should change to a neutral soilless mix for the grow medium.

  10.     
    #9
    Junior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    Ph of water is about 7,5. Lowered it to ~ 6,6 - 6,7 (lemon acid) and flushed the plant with approx. 2 litres of water.
    I was really impressed, that flushed liquid had ph about 7,5! That means that real soil ph level is up to 8!!!!
    Damn...
    Can I lower soil ph with permanent watering (provided I lower water ph to about 5,5?)

  11.     
    #10
    Senior Member

    Undefined problem (cry for help)

    I don't know where you live, but go to an indoor grow shop and get soil they recommend, which will be something like Foxfarm's or Roots brand. Supernatural used to sell in these shops but I don't know if they still make a potting soil. I don't understand why you're being advised to flush as this will not solve your problem. You need better soil, not the flower store stuff you're using. While this stuff isn't bad, you have to add everything the plant need to survive, obviously, or you wouldn't be having this problem. It is a problem of nutrients, not water or root rot. Seldom will you see root rot unless there is alot of water and very high temperatures. You can continue using that soil if you want, but whether you get new soil or not, get a bottle of Dynagro 7-9-5 from an indoor grow/hydroponic shop and follow the directions on the back for a soil grow, 1/4 tsp to 1/2 tsp in a gallon of water, probably every time you water and in a couple weeks transplant to a bigger pot, preferably with foxfarm potting soil. Just don't water all the time, let the soil dry out some before you water again. It won't cause root rot to water, but roots need oxygen and the only way they get it in a soil grow is if you let the soil dry out between waterings.

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