Please help me identify what these spots are

420Mn

Well-Known Member
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Hey man! I recall you helping me in the past! Are you saying these could be trichomes? My brain is spinning in circles trying to decipher what's what with these white specks on the seedlings and the tan spots on those two leaves
 

medidedicated

Well-Known Member
Yes. It's the first true leaves. And those white specks appear to be on all the seedlings. Looking back on a pic from the 11th they had specks then too.
This is my first grow
I would say don’t sweat it and update how it looks a week or so later with nutrients. Their bound to need nutes in 2-3 weeks from sprout and they usually mean it can feed off its cotyledons through germination. Theres a lot of stuff out there that users here would beg to differ, don’t be surprised.

I shouldn’t speak on rdwc I just could of sworn people would feed nutes right away or expect some leaf signs to arise which is when they start feeding. When I fed plain water I once got good growth for a few weeks my very first coco grow but the very next it needed nutes asap.
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
Hey man! I recall you helping me in the past! Are you saying these could be trichomes? My brain is spinning in circles trying to decipher what's what with these white specks on the seedlings and the tan spots on those two leaves
Yep. Is your camera flash always on? Its not neccessarily THC/resin at this stage, but could be other oils too.

As for the calcium, maybe your PH is just a little low?
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
Mites don't usually lay eggs on the top of the leaves anyway.. Not that they won't. Even if they did, you would see way more leaf damage\spotting along with that many eggs. I would expect to see bigger spider mites crawling around for that many eggs that size too. I don't see any sign of mite damage btw, just trichs, which I thought were extra shiny due to some light source hittin them just right, possibly your camera flash, making them stand out more. I would freak out at first glance too, and think they're eggs.

Your plant was bred that way IMO, carefully selected for those traits, which could potentially give it extra resistance like you say..

Shouldn't be that hard to tell they are glands.. try to scratch a few off. Rub them and smell..
 

420Mn

Well-Known Member
Mites don't usually lay eggs on the top of the leaves anyway.. Not that they won't. Even if they did, you would see way more leaf damage\spotting along with that many eggs. I would expect to see bigger spider mites crawling around for that many eggs that size too. I don't see any sign of mite damage btw, just trichs, which I thought were extra shiny due to some light source hittin them just right, possibly your camera flash, making them stand out more. I would freak out at first glance too, and think they're eggs.

Your plant was bred that way IMO, carefully selected for those traits, which could potentially give it extra resistance like you say..

Shouldn't be that hard to tell they are glands.. try to scratch a few off. Rub them and smell..
I was starting to wonder if it is early trichs after I mentioned it being pest resistant. It started to click that since trichs are a protective measure, a resilient plant may have them early on to protect itself. I know they rub off because I rubbed that leaf earlier and the spots disappeared. I will give it a rub test for smell. Thank you for all your help man! You have been incredibly informative! Just as you were the last time you helped me.
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
I'm on my PC too, with a huge 43" monitor @ high res, and I can see up close like an eagle ...but blurry af anywhere after a few feet because I lost my glasses like 15 years ago btw. I feel like if I wear glasses my eyes will adjust and I will lose my microscopic super vision powers that took decades to hone in, lol.

I wouldn't expect those that browse the forums on their small phone screens or whatever to see as good..
 

420Mn

Well-Known Member
I'm on my PC too, with a huge 43" monitor @ high res, and I can see up close like an eagle ...but blurry af anywhere after a few feet because I lost my glasses like 15 years ago btw. I feel like if I wear glasses my eyes will adjust and I will lose my microscopic super vision powers that took decades to hone in, lol.

I wouldn't expect those that browse the forums on their small phone screens or whatever to see as good..
Wow! Definately left an odor on my finger! You hit the nail on the head about the white spots! Thank you! I was stressing balls, man.
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
Rubbing will smash them (and produce some smells hopefully), but I bet if you poked around at one with a needle and magnifying glass you'll find they are connected, and part of the leaf. Just trichs.

I also bet your PH is kinda low causing the other spots, due to calcium not being as available. Who knows, maybe the leaves are being signaled into producing extra oils just because of the calcium deficiency? Either way, I would get on that soon, and make sure your in range before doing anything else. Use test drops in case your meter is off if you can..
 

420Mn

Well-Known Member
Rubbing will smash them (and produce some smells hopefully), but I bet if you poked around at one with a needle and magnifying glass you'll find they are connected, and part of the leaf. Just trichs.

I also bet your PH is kinda low causing the other spots, due to calcium not being as available. Who knows, maybe the leaves are being signaled into producing extra oils just because of the calcium deficiency? Either way, I would get on that soon, and make sure your in range before doing anything else. Use test drops in case your meter is off if you can..
I will get on recalibration my apera ph meter and break out the drops as well.
As for calcium, I only started with 25% of the recommended week one dose of calmag. Should I be increasing that since I'm using ro water? And is it possible for calcium deficiency to show in the lowest leaves instead of upper?
 

420Mn

Well-Known Member
Rubbing will smash them (and produce some smells hopefully), but I bet if you poked around at one with a needle and magnifying glass you'll find they are connected, and part of the leaf. Just trichs.

I also bet your PH is kinda low causing the other spots, due to calcium not being as available. Who knows, maybe the leaves are being signaled into producing extra oils just because of the calcium deficiency? Either way, I would get on that soon, and make sure your in range before doing anything else. Use test drops in case your meter is off if you can..
These color range for these drops jumps from 5.0-6.0. It doesn't have 5.5 on the chart. It's reading orange which is 5.0 but I'm not sure if that's because the next color isn't until 6.0 which is green and it's somewhere in between 5-6.0
 

Fangthane

Well-Known Member
It's all about interpreting the shades. With the solution I use, orange is 5, piss-yellow is 6, green is 7. You gotta look for a good mix of the two surrounding colors if you wanna be right between them. Takes some decent eyes and time to get used to. I typically guess slightly high, since that seems better than low.
 

420Mn

Well-Known Member
It's all about interpreting the shades. With the solution I use, orange is 5, piss-yellow is 6, green is 7. You gotta look for a good mix of the two surrounding colors if you wanna be right between them. Takes some decent eyes and time to get used to. I typically guess slightly high, since that seems better than low.
Well then, it looks like my ph is low. This darn $50 apera meter is reading 5.8-5.9 after calibration. I will bring the ph up a lil bit at a time over the next couple/few hours, until I get a piss yellow color. Seems safer to shoot for the piss yellow and be at 6.0 than guess with the orangeish an be low, like it is now. Thanks again bud! Your are the man
 

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