Light burn or nute burn?

DrOgkush

Well-Known Member
Well that’s definitely a more severe case.

idk what to tell ya. Maybe someone else can help you. But anyone that’s helped you you shrugged off and said nope. That not it. I don’t think your looking for help. Theres Literally only so many things that can be wrong. You’ve said no to all of them. So I guess your plants are perfect.
 

Hiphophippo

Well-Known Member
Looks like you let it dry out to often in between waterings and caused it to eat on itself also looks like maybe a potassium deficiency that led to a severe lock out you are going to have some harsh tasting buds. Not really much to correct what’s happened but you can level everything out with some epsom salt and keeping your medium moist not wet consistently. That could’ve been prevented had you spotted it earlier.
 

obijohn

Well-Known Member
Well that’s definitely a more severe case.

idk what to tell ya. Maybe someone else can help you. But anyone that’s helped you you shrugged off and said nope. That not it. I don’t think your looking for help. Theres Literally only so many things that can be wrong. You’ve said no to all of them. So I guess your plants are perfect.
Look, I appreciate the input, but this isn't my first rodeo. It hasn't spread or gotten worse since yesterday. I did move it a bit then, at this point I'd say it is reflected sun off metal/aluminum, which concentrates the sun in small areas like a mirror.
 

DrOgkush

Well-Known Member
Wow. Just wow. Well.
That’s a first for sure. I be sure to keep all the shiny stuff away and water droplets off my leaves…..
 
Idk about the sun reflecting off the metal to cause that bro, it does seem possible but I grow in a field and see this on my plants from time to time and I don’t got nothing shiny out there. Interested to hear what it is though I just always assumed it was water droplets. I used to work in a garden Center and they always told us to avoid watering the plants directly on their leaves for that reason but it was only on the super hot days
 

DrOgkush

Well-Known Member
Idk about the sun reflecting off the metal to cause that bro, it does seem possible but I grow in a field and see this on my plants from time to time and I don’t got nothing shiny out there. Interested to hear what it is though I just always assumed it was water droplets. I used to work in a garden Center and they always told us to avoid watering the plants directly on their leaves for that reason but it was only on the super hot days
That’s grass. Grass blades are growing at a lot of different angles and can create hotspots.
With grass you water early on and later on. Never in direct sun. Heat causes evaporation leavening salts/deposits behind. So forth and so forth. Watering is an art. But watering the leaves will never burn. Water droplets will not stand still long enough to create that magnifying effect.

I need to rinse my plants off anyhow. Ill show how many burn spot I get by tonight lol.
 

steve870

Well-Known Member
I don't see what's wrong with that plant. Spots can happen sometimes doesn't mean there's a problem
 

obijohn

Well-Known Member
The good news is no progression or any sign of this on the other plants. May be because I moved the one a bit from where it was. Just one of those things that make you go hmmm I guess
 
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