Can someone please help. Not sure what's wrong.

smokejuan4peace

New Member
I've been away from going for maybe the last 5 years but I decided to jump back in head first and using a completely different brand of nutes and soil.

I'm using the Dr earth line of organic nutes and soil. Some is liqu8l nutes and others are granules that you mix in to the top 1/4 of the soil.

I picked up some clones last week that looked less than stellar (some of them) to began with but they seem to be looking worse. I know they need a watering but I'm curious to know what this deficiency is before I water so I can address the problem. I have 12 plants of 4 different strains (3 of each kind) and maybe 6 or so plants look unhappy. I've included pictures.

The nutes I have are (all Dr earth and all organic)
Root zone (2-4-2) (this is all I fed them when I transplanted them)

Homegrown tomato, vegetable, and herb fertilizer (4-6-3)

Flower girl bud and bloom (3-9-4)

And for liquid nutes I have Dr Earth's
All purpose fertilizer (3-3-3) and
Ocean rich seaweed extract (0-0-4.5)

For soil I have a mixture of Dr earths all purpose potting soil and Dr Earth's homegrown tomato, vegetable, and herb garden soil.

What can I do?
 

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Tiffj

Well-Known Member
Dude I had a similar problem and I figured it was lack of Mg in my water and I wasn’t feeding micro nutrients at the time, looked very similar to what your experiencing, do your nutes contain any Mg?
 

Tiffj

Well-Known Member
Tbf if your still in veg and looking at those npk ratios the nitrogen does seem a bit low? Can’t hurt if your not in flower! Gota be one of the other really by the looks of things..
 

SchmoeJoe

Well-Known Member
I've been away from going for maybe the last 5 years but I decided to jump back in head first and using a completely different brand of nutes and soil.

I'm using the Dr earth line of organic nutes and soil. Some is liqu8l nutes and others are granules that you mix in to the top 1/4 of the soil.

I picked up some clones last week that looked less than stellar (some of them) to began with but they seem to be looking worse. I know they need a watering but I'm curious to know what this deficiency is before I water so I can address the problem. I have 12 plants of 4 different strains (3 of each kind) and maybe 6 or so plants look unhappy. I've included pictures.

The nutes I have are (all Dr earth and all organic)
Root zone (2-4-2) (this is all I fed them when I transplanted them)

Homegrown tomato, vegetable, and herb fertilizer (4-6-3)

Flower girl bud and bloom (3-9-4)

And for liquid nutes I have Dr Earth's
All purpose fertilizer (3-3-3) and
Ocean rich seaweed extract (0-0-4.5)

For soil I have a mixture of Dr earths all purpose potting soil and Dr Earth's homegrown tomato, vegetable, and herb garden soil.

What can I do?
Do you know the ph of your water? That definitely looks like it's probably lockout from the ph being off.
 

Bugeye

Well-Known Member
That plant is failing so bad it almost has to be a nutrient lockout. You can check your water ph but your soil ph is more likely the issue.
 

AmericanGrower508

Well-Known Member
PH is off causing lockout. Check your water ph asap. I would adjust water and give then a good flush with no nutes. I would buy some type of liquid karma or a fish emulsion (walmart sells). Mix some in a spray bottle and give then a few spays a day.
 

ANC

Well-Known Member
I see a lot of product there. More often than not the problem is not a deficiency in the mineral content that is the problem but a deficiency in the soil microbiology to access it.
 

Tiffj

Well-Known Member
I agree plain water for at least two feedings then 1/4 to 1/2 strength nutes and slowly being it back to full strength, ph to 6.5 so all types of nutes are readily available. And/or transplant into softer soil ASAP.
 
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