Need help!

Brandon8427

Active Member
ive been in flowering for about a month and a half now and lots of my leaves are turning yellow and dying at first i though it was normal but it happened to much then i though it was lack of light but the ones just below the cola are bad to. what can i do?? also i really want to reveg to bred and so far this ones been good.
 

Armadillo Slim

Well-Known Member
Some leaves are supposed to die off, but if you have loads of them dying it might me a nutrient problem, post some pictures and people will try and identify if it's nutrients or not.
 

Boneman

Well-Known Member
Pics would help but you would have to give the plant enough light to revert back to veg......18-24 hours of light.
 

Armadillo Slim

Well-Known Member
I'm 99% sure that's nute burn, someone else might be able to tell you what particular nutrient it is. My advise would be to stop feeding them and water them A LOT as soon as possible to flush the nutrients out of the soil.
 

Brandon8427

Active Member
wait burn? like as in over doing it? because i've just been using soil and nothing else(unless thats the same as nute deficiency which is what im afraid of) i added a bit more nutritional soil on top because i have no nutes and i know its knid of bad when your about to harvest(like 35-40 hairs are brown)
 

Armadillo Slim

Well-Known Member
Ok, I was quite a bit off then with my diagnosis. It might be a nutrient deficiency but usually plants start looking bad all over instead of just the tips of leaves dying while the rest looks healthy. It might just be natural. I don't think the soil on top will do much because the roots wont go into it.
 

Armadillo Slim

Well-Known Member
You could always use some ahem... natural... fertiliser, if you know what I mean. You have to dilute it about 10:1 with water though.
 

Armadillo Slim

Well-Known Member
It does work, but there is the moral issue. I can't really see the problem though, people put bat and worm shit on their plants and moldy vegetables that have been rotting in piles for months so why not? It has all the nutrients a plant needs, just dilute it first or they will get nute burn.
 

weedyoo

Well-Known Member
http://www.icmag.com/ic/showthread.php?t=11688

Flower-tone® 3-5-7


A COMPLETE PLANT FOOD WITH ALL ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS

Sizes: Available in 5 and 25 lb. bags

1 pound equals approx. 3 cupfuls

Preparing New Flower Beds Mix Flower-tone into the top four or five inches of soil at the rate of 10 lbs. per 100 (or 1 cup per 4 sq. ft.) square feet. An additional feeding should be made after the plants are well established.
Planting Flowers

Seeds: Seeds should be planted to their recommended depth. If the flower bed has already been prepared (see above) simply fill the hole with prepared soil. If the soil has not been prepared, cover the seed with soil and sprinkle 2 tablespoon of Flower-tone over the seed.
Flowers from containers: Gently remove the plant from its container. Loosen the roots and spread them into the prepared hole. The depth of the hole should not be greater than the size of the root ball. Refill the hole with prepared soil and then tamp soil gently but firmly. If the soil has not been prepared add 2 tablespoons of Flower-tone mixed with soil for seedlings from market packs. For larger plants, one or two gallon containers mix 1/2 cup with the soil and fill as above. Always finish by watering thoroughly.
Established Flowers Feed monthly approximately 1/4 cup from the beginning of the growing season until the middle of September.
Individual Plants: Broadcast 1/4 cup Flower-tone around the plant. Be careful not to put the plant food on the plant foliage or stem and do not mound the application. Sprinkle Flower-tone around like adding salt and pepper to food. After feeding water thoroughly.
 
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