thrash4ever
Well-Known Member
Fan leaves throughout a couple of my plants are going necrotic. Typically the very end of the leaf starts to curl and it continues and doubles back on itself. The curling areas turns dark grey and becomes very crisp. This occurs not just at the leaf tips but in the midriffs of leaves, prompting the leaf's shape and structure to deform, turning at odd angles (always upwards and towards the stem), accelerating the folding-over process. There are also the odd rust spots found dotted around affected leaves - these can be seen from under the canopy when light is shining through them and are easy to identify.
I'm growing Utopia Haze organically. I have five plants 40 days through flowering (about half-way, slow Hazes...). My own brief diagnosis: low pH has locked out Calcium, Magnesium and Phosphorous. The dark blotches might indicate lack of Phosphorous, the rusted dots and leaf curl lack of Calcium and Magnesium, even Potassium. Obviously I would love to hear what others think about the situation. I am growing in BioBizz Light-Mix, and using BioBizz Grow, Bloom, Top Max formulas and Canna trace elements. BioBizz's grow chart recommends 4/4/4 (ml) per litre at this stage of the grow. I have used a couple full strength doses lately but have been diluting on the whole.
Here is a full run down of my pH measurements:
- Tap Water: 8.1
- Filter Tap Water (via a Brita filter jug): 5.9
- Bottle Highland Spring water (as a test normal - the meter was calibrated with included 7.0 solution): 7-7.1
- Nutrient solution (4/4/4 mls per litre) using filtered tap water: 5.5
- Nutrient solution with tap water: 5.6
Having only acquired a liquid digital meter the day before yesterday, I have identified that I have essentially been pouring acid into my medium (pH 5.5) for the past month plus, locking out the above elements and probably more. Yesterday I performed a full flush of all five pots with shower water (identical pH to tap water even at warmer temperatures).
The (startling) results:
- First stage flush from the immediate run-off: 6.5
- Run-off from the ultimate (cleaned) flush: 7.1
This left me somewhat confused. Sure, I realise that measuring pH from run-off is not accurate as you are diluting any acidity or alkalinity with a base solution of about 8 (unfiltered tap water) in my case. But real soil conditions must have been far more acidic (towards the 5.5 of the unbalanced nutrient solution), at least this is what my hypothesis would like to hear!
Unfortunately, no one sells dolomite lime in my area and I was forced to buy synthetic pH up (potassium hydroxide). Post-flush I added a light dose of balanced nutrients (pH 6.5). Literally, two drops of the (50%, not sure about molarity) potassium hydroxide raised pH of a litre of nutrient solution by a whole point! I am letting the medium dry out until at least tomorrow, most likely Monday before adding anything further. The soil is still drenched. I will add a very light mix of nutrients and trace elements with a raised pH courtesy of the potassium hydroxide.
Couple questions:
- recommended course of action? I am thinking of adding a solution of pH 6.8 next time rather than 6.5 to make sure there is proper uptake of Calcium, Magnesium and Phosphorous.
- the filtered tap water, ditch it? Is it fucking with salinity (much lower pH than regular tap water)?
- initially the symptoms occurred lower down the plants but fan leaves towards the very top of the bud stacks are firstly showing the dotted rust spots then turning over and doing the blackened-necrotic crisp-flip. Is this purely indicative of lockout of mobile elements?
- how much can high temperatures exacerbate problems; temperatures range from 25-8 degrees Celcius in my setup?
I'm growing Utopia Haze organically. I have five plants 40 days through flowering (about half-way, slow Hazes...). My own brief diagnosis: low pH has locked out Calcium, Magnesium and Phosphorous. The dark blotches might indicate lack of Phosphorous, the rusted dots and leaf curl lack of Calcium and Magnesium, even Potassium. Obviously I would love to hear what others think about the situation. I am growing in BioBizz Light-Mix, and using BioBizz Grow, Bloom, Top Max formulas and Canna trace elements. BioBizz's grow chart recommends 4/4/4 (ml) per litre at this stage of the grow. I have used a couple full strength doses lately but have been diluting on the whole.
Here is a full run down of my pH measurements:
- Tap Water: 8.1
- Filter Tap Water (via a Brita filter jug): 5.9
- Bottle Highland Spring water (as a test normal - the meter was calibrated with included 7.0 solution): 7-7.1
- Nutrient solution (4/4/4 mls per litre) using filtered tap water: 5.5
- Nutrient solution with tap water: 5.6
Having only acquired a liquid digital meter the day before yesterday, I have identified that I have essentially been pouring acid into my medium (pH 5.5) for the past month plus, locking out the above elements and probably more. Yesterday I performed a full flush of all five pots with shower water (identical pH to tap water even at warmer temperatures).
The (startling) results:
- First stage flush from the immediate run-off: 6.5
- Run-off from the ultimate (cleaned) flush: 7.1
This left me somewhat confused. Sure, I realise that measuring pH from run-off is not accurate as you are diluting any acidity or alkalinity with a base solution of about 8 (unfiltered tap water) in my case. But real soil conditions must have been far more acidic (towards the 5.5 of the unbalanced nutrient solution), at least this is what my hypothesis would like to hear!
Unfortunately, no one sells dolomite lime in my area and I was forced to buy synthetic pH up (potassium hydroxide). Post-flush I added a light dose of balanced nutrients (pH 6.5). Literally, two drops of the (50%, not sure about molarity) potassium hydroxide raised pH of a litre of nutrient solution by a whole point! I am letting the medium dry out until at least tomorrow, most likely Monday before adding anything further. The soil is still drenched. I will add a very light mix of nutrients and trace elements with a raised pH courtesy of the potassium hydroxide.
Couple questions:
- recommended course of action? I am thinking of adding a solution of pH 6.8 next time rather than 6.5 to make sure there is proper uptake of Calcium, Magnesium and Phosphorous.
- the filtered tap water, ditch it? Is it fucking with salinity (much lower pH than regular tap water)?
- initially the symptoms occurred lower down the plants but fan leaves towards the very top of the bud stacks are firstly showing the dotted rust spots then turning over and doing the blackened-necrotic crisp-flip. Is this purely indicative of lockout of mobile elements?
- how much can high temperatures exacerbate problems; temperatures range from 25-8 degrees Celcius in my setup?