2 weeks flower in Areo little trouble

WaRpIg

Well-Known Member
I wonding if that is normal that the plants get doopy when light off and light on they raise up a bit .. is that normal
ph 5.7
ppm 900
water mist 24/7
all advanced nutes any idea guys ?:joint::hump:
 

Stella420

Member
It's not normal for them to droop. check to see if the water is running thru the areo garden. i found that the wasn't running so they weren't getting enough water, or the room is too hot check the temp
 

HSA

Well-Known Member
According to what I was taught: nutes, temperature, lights and pH are what you have to keep in balance. Verify those four issues. I don't agree with Stella420 because because I've noticed a definite droop when flowering begins due to the fact that they're expending all their energy for reproduction and mine do look kind of puny. If you changed the light schedule and nutes at the same time they have good reason to droop. If you've ever been on a diet you'll understand that. But I'd keep an eye on the pH as well.
I'm going to suggest something an instructor mentioned as a better method than what we're all doing right now. I plan to try it on my next grow: Start with 20 hours of lighting and reduce it by one hour a week. By the time you get to twelve on/twelve off all you have to change is the nutes and it's not going to be as big of a shock to the plants. If you think about it, in nature the light change is more gradual than the way we do it. He may even have some ideas for changing the nutes. I'll ask him. Anybody want to comment on that?
 

doobz

Well-Known Member
yes its normal. The plants are resting.. Don't worry about it - what you will notice is at the end of their dark cycle they will start to wake up again..
 

WaRpIg

Well-Known Member
According to what I was taught: nutes, temperature, lights and pH are what you have to keep in balance. Verify those four issues. I don't agree with Stella420 because because I've noticed a definite droop when flowering begins due to the fact that they're expending all their energy for reproduction and mine do look kind of puny. If you changed the light schedule and nutes at the same time they have good reason to droop. If you've ever been on a diet you'll understand that. But I'd keep an eye on the pH as well.
I'm going to suggest something an instructor mentioned as a better method than what we're all doing right now. I plan to try it on my next grow: Start with 20 hours of lighting and reduce it by one hour a week. By the time you get to twelve on/twelve off all you have to change is the nutes and it's not going to be as big of a shock to the plants. If you think about it, in nature the light change is more gradual than the way we do it. He may even have some ideas for changing the nutes. I'll ask him. Anybody want to comment on that?
Ok i agree with you and look my other fourm https://www.rollitup.org/aerogardeners/355743-2-weeks-flower-areoponics-advanced.html
 
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