Yep, check them roots, you got root rot.
Also known as hydro. Here's the fix: Grow plants in soil and ask yourself why the hell you shop at a chemical grow store, then have problems with natural plants grown in bullshit situations .
AgreedAbsurd, hydro has pros and cons just like soil. I do both.
Also known as hydro. Here's the fix: Grow plants in soil and ask yourself why the hell you shop at a chemical grow store, then have problems with natural plants grown in bullshit situations .
Adding a bennie tea with myco, trichoderma, and various bacteria helps to maintain a more "soil like" grow as far as micro-organisms are concerned. I personally think the trichoderma is the main player. It literally seeks out and feeds on pathogens. In soil and hydro.Also known as hydro. Here's the fix: Grow plants in soil and ask yourself why the hell you shop at a chemical grow store, then have problems with natural plants grown in bullshit situations .
There is plenty of oxygen around the roots in the 2 or 3 hours between the cycles. Or perhaps you mean something else.you must do more cycles at the beginning to give oxygen to the roots and allow them to establish, then you can slowly increase your feeds frequency
His water temperature is around 20 degrees. So that is good anyway. Even a bit cold in my opinion (but that is just an assumption) Perhaps the temperature in between his watemoments will rise, but then there is plenty of oxygen in gaseous state.and high temps dont help because it makes the root zone hotter, so it reduces oxygen ... and makes overwatering symptoms worse
Absurd, hydro has pros and cons just like soil. I do both.
Yeah, the temperature of the room is kinda high now. About 30C-31C. This could be of the heat stress?
No pesticides. Only tap water every 2-3 hours.
Water temp is about 20C
Hello, this is the 10th vegetation day, something is wrong with the plants. Maybe anybody could help??
Photos included
Best regards,
In my opinion, nobody should try hydroponics until they're at the very least well versed in soil grows.
Is it possible to heal them to normal? And expect a decent yeld? Or should be thrown away?Going to get stem rot with the stems closed in like that too.
Looks like root rot already. Peroxide the hell out of them. 5ml/L of 29+% daily to wipe it out but it looks too late. If you're going to attempt to save them spray the leaves with lots of water to keep them hydrated and use way lower light levels until they revive. I've done lots of DWC and have saved a few in my day. Only lost a couple of plants in almost 20 years.
Good luck.
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Hello, thanks for youe opinion.1. Lose the gang name.
2. I mean this in all seriousness - never go all in on a method you know nothing about, especially on a large scale.
In my opinion, nobody should try hydroponics until they're at the very least well versed in soil grows. The reason for that is simple: Soil grows are far more forgiving than hydroponics. Soil has a constant medium around the plant that can help mitigate most errors making only very egregious errors effect the grow. That enables you to fix errors and continue on.
Hydroponics is a lot less forgiving overall. If you make one good mistake, it's all over.
I would trash all of that and start over in soil with just a couple plants. Get through that grow and then do another. Then do another. By the end of the third grow you should be pretty decent at knowing what you're doing.
Then you do a soil grow alongside a small hydro grow of one or two plants. Practice until you get it right, THEN you can go all in.
Never go all in on something you're not very well versed in. It almost always leads to disaster.