Uncle Ben
Well-Known Member
Just a thought. As the footprint of the garden expands and contracts, how are you going to manage your plants? I use moveable side reflective panels and keep the panels as close to the plants as possible. You can rig something up using very large cardboard panels that furniture is shipped in or 4X8' sheets of foam. Paint them with 3 coats of thinned Behr's Ultra White latex paint.I will get pictures of my whole set up soon. It is in a cardboard box right now, but within the week i will move it to a 6ft by 30ish in steel mylar lined cabinet with an vent system but right now all i have is....
Brita does a great job of removing salts, especially carbonates and bicarbonates.
Well, as long as you know (and understand the relationship) of the NPK and micro values, and you trust the manufacturer, then that will work. I grow for the most amount of foliage going into flowering, reason why my colas are usually so big.oh ps. the formula says 3-1.5-4 on the front. im assuming thats the NPK but for some reason i remember reading that they are usually like 10-10-10 in a balanced solution but a few of my plants are growing very very well now with the nutrient content. its just that one little guy haveing problems.
Regarding the quality of the photos, I need to see them under natural light to do a decent assessment.bdonson said:Hi Uncle Ben, I've enjoyed reading your posts I think my girl suffers from too much of a good thing 2 weeks into flower 400w hps, Scott soil, snow white, room temp is around 70, using connoisseur, well water ph 7,. From the reading I've done I guess nute burn tho hopefully not too bad yet. I flushed tonight with plain well water. Sorry about the poor pic but hopefully you can make out enough detail to be of some use. Basically new growth is affected curling/rolled up leaves. My plan is too continue to water with ph adjusted water and no nutes. What do you think? Cheers
Whatever, the damage has been done, it's not reversible, and trying to "atone for your sins" by completely pulling nutrition is not the way to go. Moderate your growing plan, less is more. Focus on new growth to see if you took the appropriate corrective action. If the older leaves are still cupped but nice and green, then they are productive.....don't worry about it.
Good luck fellers ~