What the f is going on

DustyDuke

Well-Known Member
Just looking for advice on what the f is going on with this plant. I’ve sprayed it with a calmag solution when the lights were off but didn’t respond. I moved it and the next day it went this colour, any advice will be appreciated it been like this for 3 days
6E7FFD39-B677-44B5-B8AC-9D5E2D6EF145.jpeg
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
Just looking for advice on what the f is going on with this plant. I’ve sprayed it with a calmag solution when the lights were off but didn’t respond. I moved it and the next day it went this colour, any advice will be appreciated it been like this for 3 days
View attachment 4337406
What medium is it and what is your feeding routine? Water - type and hardness? Personally I wouldn’t foliar spray in flower but that’s just me. Absorption is limited anyway with spray.
 

DustyDuke

Well-Known Member
It’s coco ph is 6.5 ppm 900 it’s gettin the same as all my other plants smaller feeds but three times a day. Here’s the same strain been doing the exactly the same thing same grow room. You can see the other plant the left corner
CBFA52D4-20B2-42CF-95E6-710CDD8C7151.jpeg
 

icetech

Well-Known Member
Aren't you supposed to run coco at a much lower ph? i have been using 5.0...

P.S. strains can be so different to nutes it's nuts.. i have a Herer that has been a whiney little girl and a durban poison i could feed with gas and it would dance like it's at a party... really odd how they react so differently.
 

Aussieaceae

Well-Known Member
Hi Dusty,

I'd check the waste, see how close it is to ph6.5 and 900ppm.

Ph6.5 might be a little high for hydro, but i don't think it's the cause tbh.
 
6.5 is too high of a pH, I would suggest 5.8-5.9, but try not to swing your pH to rapidly in flower as that can cause the plant to hermie.

That being said...

That looks like a calcium deficiency, makes sense that its happening in coco. If your not familiar check out some articles on the CEC of coco. In short coco holds on to sodium and potassium and will exchange that potassium with the calcium in your feed solution faster than the plants roots can pick it up. 200 ppm calcium in your feed will help to avoid this. Also, feeds high in potassium will aggravate a calcium deficiency because of the aforementioned CEC. This can also occur with very high nitrogen levels... and from what I can see from the other plants in the picture (dark green leaves with tip burn) your feed has too much nitrogen for the flowering stage. Your looking like 18 to 21 days into flower yeah?

Some strains are complete calcium hogs (pretty much all true kush plants are like this) and really need much more calcium when initiating flower, might explain why you are seeing the deficiency all of a sudden.
 

Aussieaceae

Well-Known Member
6.5 is too high of a pH, I would suggest 5.8-5.9, but try not to swing your pH to rapidly in flower as that can cause the plant to hermie.

That being said...

That looks like a calcium deficiency, makes sense that its happening in coco. If your not familiar check out some articles on the CEC of coco. In short coco holds on to sodium and potassium and will exchange that potassium with the calcium in your feed solution faster than the plants roots can pick it up. 200 ppm calcium in your feed will help to avoid this. Also, feeds high in potassium will aggravate a calcium deficiency because of the aforementioned CEC. This can also occur with very high nitrogen levels... and from what I can see from the other plants in the picture (dark green leaves with tip burn) your feed has too much nitrogen for the flowering stage. Your looking like 18 to 21 days into flower yeah?

Some strains are complete calcium hogs (pretty much all true kush plants are like this) and really need much more calcium when initiating flower, might explain why you are seeing the deficiency all of a sudden.
That's what i'm worried about as well tbh. Not so much a deficiency, but a lockout. Might be salt buildup in the pot.

I think either way, checking the waste will likely be an indication of either.

:peace:
 

DustyDuke

Well-Known Member
The coco I brought says on the bag recommended’s 6.5 ph and the bloke at the hydro store recommended it. That why I went with 6.5 I will flush it at 5.8 though, all my other plants are thriving on it. I will up the calmag and see if it responds
 

icetech

Well-Known Member
i stopped using calmag myself.. started using jacks 321 plus cal and mag.. so i can control either one and it's WAY cheaper.
 

kiwipaulie

Well-Known Member
Why? Please elaborate.
You just keep flushing out nutrients and not getting a true reading. Just measure and adjust to the right pH when feeding and don't worry about it. :)

All you will end up doing is chasing your tail trying to correct a problem that's not there
 

Aussieaceae

Well-Known Member
You just keep flushing out nutrients and not getting a true reading. Just measure and adjust to the right pH and don't worry about it. :)
I hear you. :wink:

My reasoning though, is the ec/ppms. If there's salt in the media we can tell, because the waste readings will be sky high. If the readings were close to 900ppm and ph6.5, i'd probably assume it's slightly over / underfed. Probably overfed, given the plant's smaller size compared to the others.

I'd check my waste well before i considered a flush of any sort, put it that way.
 

kiwipaulie

Well-Known Member
I hear you. :wink:

My reasoning though, is the ec/ppms. If there's salt in the media we can tell, because the waste readings will be sky high. If the readings were close to 900ppm and ph6.5, i'd probably assume it's slightly over / underfed. Probably overfed, given the plant's size compared to the others.
Personally I just think it's over thinking it. It's been years since I've run coco or soil. I switched to hydro years ago, as it's just so much easier.
 

Aussieaceae

Well-Known Member
Personally I just think it's over thinking it. It's been years since I've run coco or soil. I switched to hydro years ago, as it's just so much easier.
Saved my skin a couple times using poorly buffered coir. I do fully admit i usually wouldn't bother checking otherwise, not until something's wrong.

Lol funny that, I've gone the other direction. Just plain water every few days. No more ph'ing my water or ec.
Just gets so tedious measuring it all.

Each to his own, take it easy. :bigjoint:
 

kiwipaulie

Well-Known Member
Saved my skin a couple times using poorly buffered coir. I do fully admit i usually wouldn't bother checking otherwise, not until something's wrong.

Lol funny that, I've gone the other direction. Just plain water every few days. No more ph'ing my water or ec.
Just gets so tedious measuring it all.

Each to his own, take it easy. :bigjoint:
You too bro!

Once you go rdwc or even dwc, you will never go back to a soil/coco medium. ;)
 
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