HSmith2412
Member

Nothing looks pinched! And I watered all of them the same way too! And see that’s how the soil looks after about 4-6 hours regardless of how I water. And there’s great drainage too. Before that picture I had just watered them 4 hours prior.They do look ready to water now BTW.
Well I will trust your judgement on how well watered they are, go by weight. If you are having to water that often then somethings not right. When you water are you drenching it and then letting it dry or are you just barely watering it?Nothing looks pinched! And I watered all of them the same way too! And see that’s how the soil looks after about 4-6 hours regardless of how I water. And there’s great drainage too. Before that picture I had just watered them 4 hours prior.
No not coco, it’s jiffy starting soil mix.Looks like coco. Is it?
If so, your plants are starving.......coco should be fed daily
They are about 2 ft from the light. Should I lower the light strength? Or maybe lessen the light times? Ok so I need to change containers too? These are meant to be able to put directly in to soil when ready. So should I go ahead and transplant them so they will stay wetter longer?To be honest they look like almost too much light and / or overwatering. Even if they are bone dry, water too often can cause this, even if all conditions are perfect. Need better containers that don't evaporate and water more but less often. IMO
I haven’t given any nutrients and I keep the ph level of the water between 6-7Those plant containers look bone dry. Those types of pots suck out moisture and evaporate quicker. Also it could be heat or light stress, over or under fed nutrients or wrong pH.
Ph fine, nutrients should be fine assuming you gave only light doses. Light height depends on type of light. What do you use? Also I was just going through what I think it could be, if you did do something I mention, just go through and consider it checked off. More of a list to try and give ideas. You don't NEED to change containers but if you want to check problems off the list and do process of elimation, then I would. It wicks moisture away faster so if you feed the plants, the nutrients will be left in dirt before they can all get used and the pot dries out, which would lead to salt buildup so next time you water it would be over fed because some nutrients didn't get used. If you do have bigger containers you definitely could transplant and it could help.I haven’t given any nutrients and I keep the ph level of the water between 6-7
it’s a 600w hps light. It does give me options to lower the strength of the light. I’m going to transplant into a different container because I want to get the watering on track.If you are using led, and a good one, I would either dim it down for seedlings to like 50 percent at 2 feet, or raise it up. Leds much stronger than what I use and even I keep them at least 2 feet away. Also they are not stretching which signifies to me the light is close enough, so if anything move further away.
 to give you an idea of height for 600w hps, based on this 600mm or 2 feet is too close.It’s
it’s a 600w hps light. It does give me options to lower the strength of the light. I’m going to transplant into a different container because I want to get the watering on track.