View Full Version : i Think this is odd, do you
Chanman
06-27-2008, 09:24 PM
i vegged my plants for about 6 weeks, got them all ( 3 ) to about 17'', im in my 4th day of flowering and the plants are starting to get the yellow brown leaves, some of the tips are turning black and one of them has lost strngth in the stock at the very top. None of this was going on til i switched to 12/12... what the hell??:shocked:
slowmo77
06-27-2008, 09:29 PM
whats your temp?
Chanman
06-27-2008, 09:37 PM
76-78 from s tart to now
slowmo77
06-27-2008, 09:51 PM
what type of soil? nutes? how often do you water and feed? any pics
Chanman
06-28-2008, 04:38 AM
water every other day had a high nitrogen food in there. plants were perfectly fine til i started to flower.
slowmo77
06-28-2008, 04:44 AM
without pics its hard to say but from your feeding schedule i'd say over feeding.. give them a good flush and see if that helps. good luck
4u2sm0ke
06-28-2008, 06:13 AM
Sorry frend but when askng a question about yor plant you will get a better response and more accurate..whch would help that Lady you are wanting to help..JMO..KEEP M GREEN:D
:postpicsworthless:
siegalsmoker
06-28-2008, 02:21 PM
Would have to agree deft. need a pic to be able to help you with your problem..
POTUS
06-28-2008, 03:32 PM
i vegged my plants for about 6 weeks, got them all ( 3 ) to about 17'', I'm in my 4th day of flowering and the plants are starting to get the yellow brown leaves, some of the tips are turning black and one of them has lost strength in the stock at the very top. None of this was going on til i switched to 12/12... what the hell??
When plants are in a 24/7 lighting and a high nitrogen feeding regimen, they grow at a very fast rate. When you reduced the amount of light hours, you also reduced the plants need for nitrogen. What you have is a classic example of what happens as a result of too much nitrogen.
Flush your plants to remove the existing nitrogen buildup and then reduce the nitrogen or just use a nutrient that is for flowering. Start with a half strength mix of what the package says until you see how your plants react to the nutrient. Then walk the strength up a little at a time until you see them having slight problems. Then back it back down to the last good strength.
Good luck to you!
honeybear
06-29-2008, 12:19 AM
When plants are in a 24/7 lighting and a high nitrogen feeding regimen, they grow at a very fast rate. When you reduced the amount of light hours, you also reduced the plants need for nitrogen. What you have is a classic example of what happens as a result of too much nitrogen.
Flush your plants to remove the existing nitrogen buildup and then reduce the nitrogen or just use a nutrient that is for flowering. Start with a half strength mix of what the package says until you see how your plants react to the nutrient. Then walk the strength up a little at a time until you see them having slight problems. Then back it back down to the last good strength.
Good luck to you!
exactly what i was going to say :p thx for this helpful info!
Chanman
07-14-2008, 01:26 PM
:eek: Still NO sign of anything..............
POTUS
07-14-2008, 01:37 PM
:eek: Still NO sign of anything..............
You haven't explained what you've done so far.
Be specific. We can't help you unless we know *exactly* what you've done to this point.
Stoney.
papabeach1
07-14-2008, 01:46 PM
did ya flush it all? remeber I talked about chlorine in water? and too much N all that can be the reason? just to help.
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