Wavy Yellowing leaves

sb surfer

Member
I transplanted these clones about 4 days ago and each day they look a little more sickly. They are getting some wavy leaves and yellowing from the center outwards. I havnt given them nutes yet and I have a 600W hps thats about 2 feet above them. The room has been between 78-83F and I am vegging 24/0 light cycle. I know this isnt a big problem now, but I dont want it to keep developing in this early stage. Do you guys this this is just transplant shock or is there something going wrong?
 

Darkuser

Well-Known Member
The light is too much/close imo.

I know if I put young clones under my 400w to soon they do that and it's also about 2ft away. I don't like to have to raise or lower the light at all, so I let them sit under a florescent until I start to see some veg growth.
 

desert fox

Well-Known Member
I would go with light burn as well. Especially cuz you just transplanted. It shouldn't have any defiecencys in fresh soil.
 

Doctor Cannabis

Well-Known Member
Iron deficiency starts showing initially at the lower leaves in the form of a very small burn of the tips and sides.

At the same time, due to the fact that it's an immobile element, it starts to affect new growth, causing all young leaves to turn light green or even yellow from the mail vein to the edge.

Iron def occurs when there is a pH lockdown (iron is absorbed at pH 4.0-6.5) or when there's excess Phosphorus, zinc, manganese, copper, if you are overwatering, or there's not enough drainage or the soil is simply lacking iron.

PS: light burn never looks like that, it makes leaf material between veins turn crispy yellow, while the veins remain green and unharmed.
 
Alright man, I have the solution to your problem. SuperTHRIVE.
Just use the recomended dose at all of your waterings and everything should be alright.
Nobody knows quite exactly how this shit works or infact what it does, but everyone guarentees It will do a great deal of work on your plants. It's like the fucken Q-ray of the plant world. :blsmoke:
 

Doctor Cannabis

Well-Known Member
Alright man, I have the solution to your problem. SuperTHRIVE.
Just use the recomended dose at all of your waterings and everything should be alright.
Nobody knows quite exactly how this shit works or infact what it does, but everyone guarentees It will do a great deal of work on your plants. It's like the fucken Q-ray of the plant world. :blsmoke:
We're not living in the stone age, mate, of corse we know how superthrive works: it contains nutes and vitamins that feed the microorganisms in the soil. These microorganisms digest the soil and produce the nutes and vitamins that can easily be absorbed by the roots. It also contains hormones that accelerate root growth.

This will however not fix an iron deficiency, due to the fact that it's caused by things that cannot be solved by simply adding superthrive: low pH. excess P, mn, co, low drainage, too much water or simply lack of iron in the soil. Actually adding something that will raise the concentration of P in the soil might harm the plant more.
 
We're not living in the stone age, mate, of corse we know how superthrive works: it contains nutes and vitamins that feed the microorganisms in the soil. These microorganisms digest the soil and produce the nutes and vitamins that can easily be absorbed by the roots. It also contains hormones that accelerate root growth.

This will however not fix an iron deficiency, due to the fact that it's caused by things that cannot be solved by simply adding superthrive: low pH. excess P, mn, co, low drainage, too much water or simply lack of iron in the soil. Actually adding something that will raise the concentration of P in the soil might harm the plant more.
I said Q-RAY damnit, Q-RAY!
 
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