Hairs are pre maturely desiccating. Turning brown. Leaves are twisting and attempting to roll over. LOL. High N from low ph. LOL. Increase will reduce uptake while increasing P and K availability. But I'm just a dumb redkneck. My bad. Carry on.Why?
Glad I can be of entertainment redneck. Or redkneck. However you're spelling it now.Hairs are pre maturely desiccating. Turning brown. Leaves are twisting and attempting to roll over. LOL. High N from low ph. LOL. Increase will reduce uptake while increasing P and K availability. But I'm just a dumb redkneck. My bad. Carry on.
And I disagree. Yet am happy to hear all points of view. Running out of patience of late is all. No malice here. Lay it out for the OP please. Can get more opinions then. I wish for education for all. Even my old carcass.Not at all, you're quite correct i just like proper answers. However I would contend that first thing is likely to be heavy handed feeding as op acknowledges himself. I would assume ph is correct in first instance and I see no other indication of the lights being too close. Flush will have fixed. Go back in correct n ratio and ph. Don't get too complicated in first instance.
Oh boy.Purely as I said. The plants have had excess nutrient and show signs of toxicity, they have been flushed, this should be fixed by resuming reduced nutrients at this stage. We don't know the ph as we haven't been told but I'm assuming It's in appropriate range. Overfeeding won't be fixed by changing it. This is only the solution if your nutes are correct and you're having issues. Assumptions don't get you anywhere do they so perhaps checking ph is good advice also! But, all things being equal, simplest answer is as I said. However I will certainly concede you have a good point with the lights and this must be checked. Interesting isn't it, most problems are ph related and the nitrogen toxicity is often mistaken as being caused by lights or overwatering due to symptoms specific to n toxicity. It shows like a deficiency due to the prevention of uptake.
Yep. Still digging.What are you talking about? Who said there was? I said quite clearly the sheen. Read it. Its a sign of n toxicity. Shiny leaves. Start where you like as long as its not near me smart arse. Did you think I was having a dig or something? The dude says himself there's tip burn.
Again. Tip burn clawing?? Where? High N . Toxic? Barely. Just high.Now thats sense. Gotta go with what you know.
also: I accidentally left a fan running way too strong overnight. jostled the colas more than i would like, so that might account for some of the brown pistils!Yes, they will be just fine as long as you fix the nutrient issue. Other thing, have you knocked or brushed the flowers more than gently? Sometimes an elbow or maybe sleeve catches them, or when youre tying down you give them a knock, which causes the pistils to die (why they go brown, this is what happens when they ripen. The dying that is.). Happens to me all the time, part of confined spaces. As long as your plants healthy new ones will outgrow them pretty quickly. Just watch the nutes. I look at the very newest growth when assessing this, any change in the way of kinking, twisting, or even looking at me funny and I know the nutes are out. I go in .25ml increments which for me is 75ppm and can see if they've been overfed even by one increment the same day, be sure by the following morning. Getting on top straightaway is best and your plants always tell you what they want.
The sheen on the leaves suggests slight nitrogen toxicity by the way. Common in early flower, particularly as you change schedule. Flush and a reduction will sort it although unless its considerable you could have got away without the flush. Keep a proper flush as last resort always.
Anyway, you done good!