I appreciate it growmies! I'll give it a shot bumping it back to 60-70%. As for the mag looking issues, I did have mag/cal deficiency about 3-4 weeks ago. That's since been remedied. Got soil pH around 6.5, FF big bloom and Tiger bloom both have mag.
I'll give her some more light. Hopefully that really brings on a stretch! As for temps, well I heard 70-76 is ideal on Mr.Grow-it interviewing with some scientist. Also my temps were hitting 81-83 normally but I finally realized my tent has vent flaps 4" from the base so much more air in! Dropped temp immediately to stable 75.
"some scientist" - that was probably an interview with Dr Bruce Bugbee, arguably the biggest wheel going in the area of plant biology in the US. Check out his YouTube videos — they're excellent.
I just finished watching and taking notes on this video
The speaker is a PhD candidate who works with Bugbee and the information in the video is superb. Growers will benefit from the content, especially the part where he talks about light levels at 25:40. From my notes:
"25:48
Light quantity
Most companies measure a single leaf - 6 cm2 but that does not cover the canopy
What's remarkable about cannabis is that canopy photosynthetic rate continues to increase all the way up to full sunlight.
Peak sunlight is about 2k, this line is still going up.
As a grower, we don't care about how many mols of CO2 are being fixed every second. We don't care about photons falling every second. We want to know how much (rain) fell over the course of a day.
Rather than looking at PPFD, we can look at DLI.
P continues to go up - does that translate to yield.
10, 30, 50, and 70 mols so the highest treatment was about 20% higher than full summer sunlight and the yield went up in a linear fashion. 1% more light, 1% more yield.
James Nielson - went to 100mols and yield keeps going up.
Wetmoreland was ambient CO2 - Nielson was elevated CO2"
"P" is an abbreviation for photosynthesis.
There's a lot more in there, esp. the data on the role of phosphorus and, implicitly, the usefulness of bloom boosters.
Edit: is tacoing more of sides curling up rather than both sides "V" from a blade's center vein?
Yes, you hit it on the head. Another term is "canoeing".
Another photo avoidance mechanism is for the leaf to rotate around the axis of the petiole.
I've hit both of those and the affected leaves will return to their normal position and shape pretty quickly. It's been 30-60 minutes but I did have a bent cola that never straightened back out.