Ah I have been looking into food stick so I can start using them at the weekend. I was told though that HPS would be fine for all stages so long as I make sure to have it at the right heights? (which I obviously did wrong lol) Because the pots are big I actually tend to water them slowly, i.e. add tiny bits at a time and let it soak into the soil before adding more. I usually give them a cup of water each when I water. Well with the cotyledons now dead I presume the water goes to the new leaves and nodes. I did notice new growth in one plant, not so sure about the other. Last time I watered was Monday and I am thinking about watering again tomorrow. Yay or nay?Don't worry, you're not doing anything wrong. It could be time for some food sticks that release slowly however. Those bulbs are a problem, way too much for seedling. Put that light aside and use cfls for the next week and a half.
EDIT: On second thought, those plants are extremely stressed. Keep in mind that with pots that large, you need to add water in amounts that they can reach the roots, and it doesn't sit on the topsoil. If the hairs are still on the stem and new nodes, you don't have to worry too much about overwatering. water fuels the cotyledons at that stage.
Dude I totally agree with you all the way. There were one or two people who said I didn't do my research. I did. Different things worked for different people. I noticed that most people were suggesting HPS bulbs when I did my research, I was also told to just plant straight to a 4 or 5 gallon bucket. Different things work for different people. I am a newbie. I saw there were loads of different ways that worked and I just picked the one I got the most info on.With the condition that those plants are in, you have no idea of knowing what the problem could be until you try your options. The last time you watered was Monday? With pots that large, you have to add lots of water or else you're stock piling salt based nutrients. Do not transplant the plants, they won't handle that well. It could be that too much that there is just too much sodium in your soil from under watering.
you have to consider your variables and options here. The survival rate is a slim window, and sometimes doing exactly what needs to be done won't even help... Don't expect miracles.
I say add water, but not to a complete flush. You should do a more gradual flush, add water to 35%-40% run off every 2-3 days. You could take the advice not to water, but heed the fact that these guys probably have perfectly well bodied plants that are in the last few days of veg. I feel that in this particular underground community of botanists, people often find that no matter the predicament of someone else, they always end up saying exactly what may have been their problem earlier, which can be to your plants disadvantage.
its alright just give it time as you see people are responding hope it all bounces back !!!And sorry for hijacking your post bro, I meant to harm Just panicing a little and wanted a quick responce D:
When I first tried growing I asked the same question on rollitup about the first two leaves and everyone ripped me a new one for asking haha. I don't know why they do it honestly, but I'm pretty sure tons of plants begin growth that way.Oh really? Why do the first two leaves dry up and die? just curious... Ah I was wondering if accidentally getting droplets on the leaves had anything to do with it... You have to remember though that those pictures are from Friday :/ They were slightly papery but then Sunday they were totally crispy and just dead... And you don't think it is a problem with air circulation? I didn't think it was because of the large space they have. like bigger than my bedroom xD So what do you suggest? Not water them for 2-3 days and bring my 600w HPS bulb down again (as I had raised it due to fear of heat stress)