What's wrong with my plantView attachment 4150032
It's not too young for deficiency.pH issue. Too young for any deficiency. And medium staying wet so roots are waterlogged
^pH issue. Too young for any deficiency. And medium staying wet so roots are waterlogged
Yeah. It is actually until after actual physical conditions change.It's not too young for deficiency.
I have a hard time telling if a person is in coco or soil. What if he is in coco?pH issue. Too young for any deficiency. And medium staying wet so roots are waterlogged
Although they were in tiny pots when I'd see deficiencies start..I have a hard time telling if a person is in coco or soil. What if he is in coco?
What if he is in Fox Farm Light Warrior. I have had seedlings that size show deficiencies in light warrior if not fed.
You think this yet you suggest it's a pH problem.... Why does pH cause issues in the first place?Yeah. It is actually until after actual physical conditions change.
So wait until it shows signs of deficiency? That makes absolutely no sense. The real teaching moment is to make sure your seedlings have enough nutrients so they don't end up deficient in the first place.Tr95,
I'm going to comment because your picture is a perfect teaching tool. All new growers should learn to read the plant. Since seedlings are sensitive to nutes and already have stored nutrients in the cotyledons...it is recommended to not feed until the plant "asks" for food.
That picture shows a plant asking to be fed.
JD
I respectfully disagree with you ChurchHaze. So many new growers overfeed and kill seedlings. It's common horticultural practice to allow a seed to use up it's stored nutrients before starting supplementation. A plant that's a tiny bit yellow like that will green up in no time at all.Either start with a soil built with lots of nutrition, or start your hydroponic res at what you'd feed any other plant...
What I tend to see is noobs coming with plants like this. It's a common horticultural practice to feed your plants and not let them turn yellow.I respectfully disagree with you ChurchHaze. So many new growers overfeed and kill seedlings. It's common horticultural practice to allow a seed to use up it's stored nutrients before starting supplementation. A plant that's a tiny bit yellow like that will green up in no time at all.
JD
Actually I'm starting to disagree with myself. I picked a poor plant siauation to make a well meaning point...and it backfired.You guys are funny. I'm not disagreeing with either of you