Jimmy Sparkle
Well-Known Member
I wish you all radness.. Again if I've offended anyone I apologize
Jimmy, i come to you with humbleness and ask what other possibility could cause this?Go read a book preferably one written by a university on N deficiency and plant health. Or perhaps attend a seminar or symposium on plant growth and soil structure and on and on. I've done all this for a living and sat through tons of this. I'm just trying to pass on what I sat through and learned. I'm really not trying to be a jerk or anything
If you are just chucking seeds out the window, I agree with you. They will yellow in late flower. But we certainly have the ability to keep them green through harvest by supplementing them. This is a fact.All that I was originally saying is that in nature especially in an annual or semi annual herb or weed older leaves do in fact yellow and die. It is an unavoidable certainty. A seed bearing annual that stays solid green until harvest (death) is not natural or the norm. Even in a artificial environment and being well cared for.
Ok outdoors is one thing. I could understand if you wanted to stick with nature (organic only/outdoor only/water only) then by all means thats okay with me. However growing indoors is 100% artificial and a completly different ball game. Alot of times stuff like this is noticeable at harvest when grown indoors.All that I was originally saying is that in nature especially in an annual or semi annual herb or weed older leaves do in fact yellow and die. It is an unavoidable certainty. A seed bearing annual that stays solid green until harvest (death) is not natural or the norm. Even in a artificial environment and being well cared for.