What's wrong with her!?

KeemGod

Well-Known Member
I transplanted ma girls last week and 1 of them has went the wrong way. The others acted as though i didn't even transplant them. The fert that i'm using is the BMO organic line (grow it green&super plant tonic) The first pic is from today and the second one is from yesterday. Any help is greatly appreciated.:peace::joint::joint::joint:
 

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toquer

Active Member
it appears to be root damage. perhaps during transplant you bent the main roots that were supplying the plant with water that allowed for the stems to stand up on their own. At this point there is not enough water pressure inside the plant to hold itself up. treat it like a clone and it should recover, gonna have to trim back some of the older tissue and foliar feed.
 

Xare

Well-Known Member
Transplant Shock.

Here is a tip to avoid this kind of shock.


After I transplant I work in at least 5 hours of darkness. Meaning do the transplant just before the light goes off. Or turn the light off for a few hours.


The wilting that you see after transplant means the roots were disturbed too much. The wilting is made worse by having light on them just after a transplant.
 

KeemGod

Well-Known Member
I thought that super thrive was supposed to handle that!? And when u say treat it like a clone, what do u mean?
 

toquer

Active Member
My clones get rooting agents, and foliar feeding to ensure good root production. They also have very few leaves because they have no roots. That's what supports the plant. With damaged roots there's nothing supporting the plant so you have to help it rebuild more roots. Xare nailed it...give them more darkness to allow them to adjust.

I've never tried superthrive in a foliar applicaion but I don't doubt that it'd work. It's mainly b vitamins and humic acid. This should help feed the plant through the transplant shock.
 

Topo

Well-Known Member
Were the plants root-bound? I transplant as soon as I know they're root-bound, that way, it all comes out of the pot in one piece. That way, no roots are exposed by the detachment of loose soil.

I have never had transplant shock when doing it this way. And yup, at this point you're going to have to nurse them by misting the leaves and using very little light.

Good luck! :leaf:
 

KeemGod

Well-Known Member
All of ma other ladies are doing just fine! The 1 gh Cheese was too far gone so i just got rid of it. :( That would've been too much of a hassle. But on the other hand i shoulda kept it so i coulda experimented with it. Thanks for the reply's guys. peace
 
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