Anyone recognize this?

BaginsZA

Well-Known Member
To get closer to an answer, could you shed some light on a few topics?

How often do you water?
What is your PH?
What soil mix are you using?
Have you fed the plants at all (if so what?)
When did this start, and what was the major change before this started?
 

Kalebaiden

Well-Known Member
Looks like bad pH and nute burn.

I'm not a coco grower so others will know how to fix it if it's possible but the symptoms are screaming for help.
 

BaginsZA

Well-Known Member
Those leaves look like typical "claws" which is typically overwatering - its a big pot for the size of the plant, and yeah I would agree the top looks dry, who knows whats happening in the bottom half.. again, there really is nothing to go on - so if you did in fact throw them out, then Ill take a moment of silence, if you have not thrown them out - give us some more info, and we can try to fix it
 

BaginsZA

Well-Known Member
Sweet - I am going to assume they are still around and ready to be saved - my suggestions for you are:

Back off on the watering - and before you water again, stick your finger into the soil, and see for yourself if its infact dry before you water again. A pot that size, and a plant that small, wont need water every other day.
Check your temps - as SouthSide says, you could have heat stress adding to this situation, so back off the lights a good 25% or more, increase the air flow and try to relax the environment (50-55% RH, 21 - 26 celclius, plenty of air flow)

You stated that you have transplanted a week ago, so again, try to give the plant some time to recover and root up properly
 

waterproof808

Well-Known Member
Nitrogen Toxicity.
Coco should not ever dry out completly. Your EC/PPM will spike when Coco dries out due to salts falling out of solution and crystallizing in your medium.
 
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